Principles of administrative procedure in EC law
Principles of administrative procedure in EC law
Law of Europe > Regional organization and integration (Europe) > The European Communities. Community law > Administrative law and process > General
Edition Details
- Creator or Attribution (Responsibility): Hanns Peter Nehl
- Language: English
- Jurisdiction(s): England
- Publication Information: Oxford : Hart Pub., 1999
- Material: Internet resource
- Type: Book, Internet Resource
- Other titles: Administrative procedure in EC law
- Permalink: http://books.lawlegal.eu/principles-of-administrative-procedure-in-ec-law/ (Stable identifier)
Additional Format
Online version: Nehl, Hanns Peter. Principles of administrative procedure in EC law. Oxford: Hart Pub., 1999 (OCoLC)606222096 Online version: Nehl, Hanns Peter. Principles of administrative procedure in EC law. Oxford: Hart Pub., 1999 (OCoLC)607185793
Short Description
XX, 214 pages ; 24 cm
Purpose and Intended Audience
Useful for students learning an area of law, Principles of administrative procedure in EC law is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.
Research References
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Bibliographic information
- Publisher: Hart Pub.
- Responsable Person: Hanns Peter Nehl.
- Publication Date: 1999
- Country/State: England
- Number of Editions: 15 editions
- First edition Date: 1998
- Last edition Date: 1999
- Languages: English, German
- Library of Congress Code: KJE5602
- Dewey Code: 341.2422
- ISBN: 1841130087 9781841130088
- OCLC: 40807982
Main Contents
Part A Introduction: the quest for and expansion of basic procedural rules in a hetergenic administrative “system”; judicial procedural review as the catalyst for constitutionalising process principles. Part B Procedural “good administration” in EC law: introduction; the significance of “good administration” with regard to procedural rules – “good administration ” as an indeterminate notion, procedural “good administration” – the dichotomy of functions underlying process rules; the principle of good administration in the case law of the Community Courts – the “principle of good administration” and access to information – the Tradax case, the “principle of good administration” and the right to be heard, the “principle of good administration” and the principle of care – the IAZ case, the absence of the “principle of good administration” in EC law?. Part C Expansion – access to information and the right to be heard: introduction; the right of access to information – competition law as the origin of the Community right to access to information, the dynamic mutation of “access to information” into a fundamental process right in competition proceedings; the right to be heard (the audi alteram partem rule) – competition law, anti-dumping law, customs law, administration of the European Social fund, more recent jurisprudence and outlook. Part D Expansion – the principle of care (diligence): introduction; the foundations of the principle of care – a cursory conceptualisation of the principle of care in the early case law, a process principle with a strong connotation of substantive legality, the relationship between “care” and administrative investigatory powers, the core justification for the concept of care – administrative discretionary powers, the relationship between the principle of care and the duty to give reasons; the case law on the principle of care – anti-dumping matters – the Nolle cases, general customs matter – the Technische Universitat Munchen and France-Aviation cases, complainants in competition proceedings – the Automec II and Asia Motor France II cases, complainants in state aids proceedings – from Cook to Sytraval; outlook. Part E Conclusion.
Summary Note
This book presents an analysis of the recent development of administrative procedures in EC law.