The British tribunal system is viewed as an independent extension of the court system with adjudicative powers over a broad range of government activities. The author examines the structure and composition of British tribunals, discusses the role of lawyers and laymen within the tribunal system, and draws comparisons to administrative law bodies in the United States
The study presented below forms part of a larger project whose aim is to provide a comparative analy...
The Senate‘s role in judicial appointments has come under increasingly withering criticism for its u...
Administrative tribunals are adjudicating bodies established to relieve the traditional courts from ...
The British tribunal system is viewed as an independent extension of the court system with adjudicat...
This thesis focuses on the creative role of the judiciary in two areas of administrative procedure. ...
Employment tribunals, originally called industrial tribunals, were established 50 years ago in Great...
This comment examines and contrasts government adjudication in the US, Australia, and the UK, and co...
<p>This paper traces the development of administrative tribunals in the UK, from the modern phase of...
This article compares several systems of administrative adjudication. In the U.S., adjudication is t...
This article compares several systems of administrative adjudication. In the U.S., adjudication is t...
The article deals with the contemporary system of administrative justice in Great Britain. The autho...
The limits which courts place on the powers of administrative tribunals have particular significance...
Growth in the appellate caseload in the United States has caused a substantial increase in the numbe...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
Julian Farrand, the Pensions Ombudsman, considers the arguments for and against the different disput...
The study presented below forms part of a larger project whose aim is to provide a comparative analy...
The Senate‘s role in judicial appointments has come under increasingly withering criticism for its u...
Administrative tribunals are adjudicating bodies established to relieve the traditional courts from ...
The British tribunal system is viewed as an independent extension of the court system with adjudicat...
This thesis focuses on the creative role of the judiciary in two areas of administrative procedure. ...
Employment tribunals, originally called industrial tribunals, were established 50 years ago in Great...
This comment examines and contrasts government adjudication in the US, Australia, and the UK, and co...
<p>This paper traces the development of administrative tribunals in the UK, from the modern phase of...
This article compares several systems of administrative adjudication. In the U.S., adjudication is t...
This article compares several systems of administrative adjudication. In the U.S., adjudication is t...
The article deals with the contemporary system of administrative justice in Great Britain. The autho...
The limits which courts place on the powers of administrative tribunals have particular significance...
Growth in the appellate caseload in the United States has caused a substantial increase in the numbe...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
Julian Farrand, the Pensions Ombudsman, considers the arguments for and against the different disput...
The study presented below forms part of a larger project whose aim is to provide a comparative analy...
The Senate‘s role in judicial appointments has come under increasingly withering criticism for its u...
Administrative tribunals are adjudicating bodies established to relieve the traditional courts from ...