Due Process of Law Beyond the State: Requirements of Administrative Procedure
ISBN: 9780191830303
Platform/Publisher: Oxford Academic / Oxford University Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited
Subjects: Constitutional and Administrative Law; Public International Law;

Traditionally the issues concerning the exercise of administrative powers by public authorities were considered a type of national enclave. It was the responsibility of the state to ensure that adequate procedural safeguards were in place to prevent the government from interfering with the rights of its citizens. During the last few decades, however, a variety of sets of rules regarding procedural due process has developed to govern the conduct of those public authorities who operate on a regional or world regulatory footing, such as the European Union and the World Trade Organization.

Analysing the procedural due process requirements applicable to administrative procedure beyond the borders of the States, this volume demonstrates how regional and global regulatory regimes impose requirements that are strikingly similar to those set out by the most developed legal systems of the world. The book argues that such requirements of administrative procedure are justified not only by the traditional concerns for the protection of individual interests against the misuse of power by public authorities, but also by other values, such as good governance and cooperation between public authorities. Finally, the book conceptualizes such rules as legal requirements which arbitral tribunals and other agencies should respect when interpreting standards of justice.



Giacinto della Cananea, Professor of Administrative law and EU Administrative Law, University of Rome "Tor Vergata"

Giacinto della Cananea is Professor of Administrative law and EU Administrative Law at the University of Rome "Tor Vergata". Professor della Cananea is a founding member of the steering committee of RENEUAL, the network on EU administrative law and was formerly a Visiting Professor at Yale Law School. He is interested in how different legal systems evolve when facing similar problems and how they interact with each other either directly or through regional and global regimes.
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