Judicial review and bureaucratic impact [electronic resource] : international and interdisciplinary perspectives / edited by Marc Hertogh and Simon Halliday.
Material type:
- K3175 .J827 2004eb
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KNCHR Library SharePoint | Non-Fiction | K3175 .J827 2004eb (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Available |
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K2330 .S36 2006 The limits of Leviathan | K3165 .M54 2006 The migration of constitutional ideas / | K3171 .S77 2006 Can might make rights? | K3175 .J827 2004eb Judicial review and bureaucratic impact | K3224 .K67 2008 The future governance of citizenship | K3230.R45 H38 2005 The rights of refugees under international law / | K3240 .B28 2007 Civil responsibility for gross human rights violations : |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 285-301) and index.
Understanding judicial review and its impact / Peter Cane --
Conceptual issues in researching the impact of judicial review on government bureaucracies / Maurice Sunkin --
Studying bureaucratic implementation of judicial policies in the United States : conceptual and methodological approaches / Bradley C. Canon --
Impact studies in the United Kingdom / Genevra Richardson --
The politics of soft law : how judicial decisions influence bureaucratic discretion in Canada / Lorne Sossin --
The operation of judicial review in Australia / Robin Creyke, John McMillan --
Legalising the unlegaliseable : terrorism, secret services and judicial review in Israel 1970-2001 / Yoav Dotan --
Implementing court orders in the United States : judges as executives / Malcolm M. Feeley --
Judicial review and bureaucratic impact : the future of European Union administrative law / Martin Shapiro --
Judicial review and bureaucratic impact in future research / Marc Hertogh, Simon Halliday.
How effective are the courts in controlling bureaucracies? What impact does judicial review have on the agencies which are targeted by its rulings? For the first time, this book brings together the insights of two intellectual disciplines which have hitherto explored these questions separately: political science and law/socio-legal studies. Leading international scholars from both fields present new research which focuses on the relationship between judicial review and bureaucratic behaviour. Individual contributors discuss fundamental conceptual and methodological issues, in addition to presenting a number of empirical case studies from various parts of the world: the United States, Canada, Australia, Israel, and the United Kingdom. This volume constitutes a landmark text offering an international, interdisciplinary and empirical perspective on judicial review's impact on bureaucracies. It will significantly advance the research agenda concerning judicial review and its relationship to social change.
Electronic reproduction. Palo Alto, Calif. : ebrary, 2007. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.
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