Administrative Justice Fin de siècle: Early Judicial Standards of Administrative Conduct in Europe (1890-1910)
Giacinto della Cananea and Stefano Mannoni
Abstract
This book argues that too often the evolution of administrative law in Europe has been considered in the light of legal doctrines fashioned at the national level, if not of few authors, whose works are quoted to stress the different paths undertaken by European countries after the French Revolution. The book deviates from these standard accounts in that it focuses on control of administrative power by the courts and considers, empirically, judicial decisions at the epoch of the Belle Époque, more precisely the years 1890-1910. The legal systems selected for comparison include Austria, Belgium, ... More
This book argues that too often the evolution of administrative law in Europe has been considered in the light of legal doctrines fashioned at the national level, if not of few authors, whose works are quoted to stress the different paths undertaken by European countries after the French Revolution. The book deviates from these standard accounts in that it focuses on control of administrative power by the courts and considers, empirically, judicial decisions at the epoch of the Belle Époque, more precisely the years 1890-1910. The legal systems selected for comparison include Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, and the UK. Some relied on ordinary or generalist courts, while others created administrative courts, The outcome of the analysis confirms that, in contrast with the over-emphasized differences among national legal doctrines, the challenges which those legal systems faced were largely the same. Moreover, and more importantly, the analysis of the standards of conduct defined and refined by the courts reveals that they exercised an increasingly vigorous control over discretion. They gradually opened the gates of judicial review to new interests, intervened on grounds of purpose and defined general principles of law that were very similar, if not the same. The courts, not legislators, thus created the central tenets of administrative law. Finally, various explanations for the role played by the courts are considered in legal, historic, and political perspectives. The book thus provides an unprecedented outlook on the relationship between public authorities and individuals at the zenith of the sovereign state.
Keywords:
Administrative law,
Common core,
Courts,
Due process of law,
General principles of law,
Judicial review,
Rule of law
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2021 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780198867562 |
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: March 2021 |
DOI:10.1093/oso/9780198867562.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Giacinto della Cananea, editor
Professor of Administrative Law, Bocconi University
Stefano Mannoni, editor
Professor of Legal History, University of Florence
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