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Comparative perspectives on administrative procedure / edited by Russell L. Weaver, Herwig C.H. Hofmann, Cheng-Yi Huang, Steven I. Friedland.
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Title:Comparative perspectives on administrative procedure / edited by Russell L. Weaver, Herwig C.H. Hofmann, Cheng-Yi Huang, Steven I. Friedland.
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Other Contributors/Collections:Weaver, Russell L., 1952- editor.
Hofmann, Herwig, editor.
Huang, Cheng-Yi, editor.
Friedland, Steven I., editor.
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Published/Created:Durham, North Carolina : Carolina Academic Press, [2017]
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Holdings
Holdings Record Display
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Location:LAW LIBRARY (level 3)Where is this?
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Call Number: K3402.A6 D48 2017
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Number of Items:1
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Status:Available
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Location:LAW LIBRARY special collections (non-circulating)Where is this?
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Call Number: K3402.A6 D48 2017
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Number of Items:1
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Status:Available
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Location:LAW LIBRARY (level 3)Where is this?
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Library of Congress Subjects:Administrative procedure--Congresses.
Administrative law--Congresses.
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Description:xi, 270 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
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Series:Carolina Academic Press global papers series ; v. III.
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Summary:"The contributions to this book focus largely on the current developments in administrative law in various legal systems such as the U.S., Japan, Australia, Chile and Canada. The dynamics arise from the interplay of constitutional principles and administrative procedures as well as from the cross-fertilizing influences of comparative law approaches to the development of legal principles and rights."--Back cover.
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Notes:Contributions based on conference "Renovating administrative law."
Includes bibliographical references.
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ISBN:9781611638950 paperback alkaline paper
161163895X paperback alkaline paper
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Contents:Machine generated contents note: Introduction: Comparative Perspectives on Administrative Procedure / Cheng-Yi Huang
Informalizing Informal Rulemaking / Richard Murphy
Introduction
I. Fall from Notice-and-Comment Grace
A. Notice-and-comment rulemaking was easy
B. Notice-and-comment rulemaking became really hard
- and kind of formal
II. Reinformalizing Informal Rulemaking
Conclusion
Is the U.S. Supreme Court Becoming Hostile to the Administrative State? / Jeffrey S. Lubbers
Coda
Renovating Administrative Procedure: An Impressionistic Guide to the American Experience / Peter L. Strauss
Agency Coordination as Agency Action / Robert B. Ahdieh
Regulation as Coercion, and as Coordination
Coercive Consequences of Coordination
Reassessing the Scope of Administrative Review
Tradition and Renewal of Administrative Ex Ante Controls of Legality: The Case of Toma de Razon In Chile / Gabriel Bocksang Hola
I. origins of toma de razon
II. current system of toma de razon
a. nature of toma de razon
b. scope of toma de razon
c. procedure of toma de razon
III. Assessment and legislative renovation of toma de razon
Conclusions
Misinterpretation or a Productive Diversion? The Rise and Fall of the "Relationship of Reciprocal Interchangeability" Concept and the Possibility of Reception of a Legal Interpretation / Narufumi Kadomatsu
I. Introduction
II. Background: The Kunitachi condominium conflict
III. Standing to sue
(a). Japanese case law on standing
(b). "Relationship of reciprocal interchangeability (RRI)"
(c). Application to the Kunitachi conflict
IV. Diversion of the RRI theory to civil litigation
- A-3 Decision
V. Fading away of the RRI theory
(a). Supreme Court's "simple and casual" recognition of "the interest in the landscape"
(b). "Reverse import" to standing in administrative litigation
VI. Reflections
(a). Reception-Diversion
- Fading Away
(b). Micro- fit and macro-fit
(c). On "Diversion"
(d). Internal Perspective: Right to Claim for Maintaining the District Character (Gebietserhaltungsanspruch)?
(e). External Perspective: Should we call RRI back to the front of the stage?
Two Conundrums of Canadian Administrative Law and a Theoretical Turn / Hoi L. Kong
pt. I State of Judicial Review in Canada: A Primer and Two Conundrums
pt. II Snapshot of the Jurisprudence
1. Judicial Review of An Agency's Exercise of Statutory Interpretation
2. Judicial Review of Executive Branch Decisions Where no Reasons are Given
pt. III Theorizing Judicial Review
1. Dyzenhaus and Deference as Respect
2. Towards a Principled Interpretation of Correctness Review
3. Judicial Review's Constitutional Principles
A. McLean: Normative Diversity and Coherence
B. Agraira: Normative Diversity and Coherence
Conclusion
Recent Developments in Administrative Law: The Tremors of March 9, 2015 / Peter L. Strauss
I. Department of Transportation v. Association of American Railroads
II. Perez, Secretary of Labor v. Mortgage Bankers Association
Proceeding Without an Administrative Procedure Act: The Australian Story
Margaret Allars
1. Administrative Procedure Act
2. Australia
3. Procedural Uniformity: Some Conclusions
Constitution as a Primary Administrative Procedure Act in Chilean Law / Gabriel Bocksang Hola
Introduction
I. systematic function
II. principial function
III. suppletory function
Conclusion
Administrative Searches and the Need for Reform / Russell L. Weaver
I. Administrative Authority to Search: Modern Judicial Interpretations
II. Border Search Doctrine
III. NSA Data Collection
Conclusion
Taking "Regulatory Courts" Seriously
- A Perspective from Japanese City Planning Law / Narufumi Kadomatsu
1. Conceptual Issues
1.1. Regulation: A relative/reciprocal concept
1.2. Expanding functions of the judiciary?
2. Institutional backdrop: "legal dispute"
2.1. concept of "legal dispute"
2.2. Administrative litigation as a "legal dispute"
2.2.1. "Legal dispute" as a gatekeeper: Subject matter (administrative disposition) and standing to sue
2.3. concept of judiciary limited to judgments on "questions of law"
2.3.1. Administrative discretion and "questions of law"
2.3.2. Relativity of "questions of law"
2.4. Summary
3. Tug of war over the limits of the judiciary
3.1. Relativization of "gatekeeper" function
3.1.1. Administrative disposition
3.1.2. Standing to sue
3.2. Possibilities for more active intervention
3.2.1. Determination of facts and prognosis
3.2.2. Interpretation of law and "judgment making process control"
4. Conclusion
Chevron with Teeth: Judicial Deference and Information Elicitation / Cheng-Yi Huang
1. Disarray or Disaggregation
- Judicial deference in post-Mead Era
2. Unfolding Judicial Deference
2.1. Judicial Deference under Express Legislative Delegation
2.2. Judicial Deference under Implicit Legislative Delegation
3. Judicial Deference and the Elicitation of Information
3.1. Deference as Rule vs. Deference as Standard
3.2. Legal Mechanisms for Information Elicitation and Circulation in the Post-Mead Era
4. Conclusion
Proliferation of Administrative Searches in the Modern Administrative State / Russell L. Weaver
I. Fourth Amendment and Administrative Searches During the Colonial Period
II. Supreme Court and Administrative Inspections
III. Conundrum Presented by the Court's Administrative Search Jurisprudence.