Courts don’t just exist. They are shaped by organisational and procedural rules which are enacted by the legislative – and can be abused accordingly. Court packing schemes and tampering with the retirement age of judges are just two examples of such abuse. On the other hand, sometimes the judiciary is indeed in need of reform, e.g. when they no longer manage to deliver judgments in a timely fashion. How do you distinguish “good” judicial reforms from “bad” ones? Is there such a thing as a “good” court packing scheme
There are many roads to injustice and administrative law is one of them. Modern administrative law s...
Shifting the procedural law of the Administrative Court is a necessity. This happened as an effort t...
Public policy theory generally studies two types of institutional change: major changes at critical ...
It is said that under our present practice, no matter how just the verdict and judgment of the court...
The substantive law of judicial review of administrative action has grown in leaps and bounds in rec...
My contribution to this symposium will consist of the advancement of one main thesis and four subord...
In these later days much is said about reforming the procedure of our courts, about recalllng our ju...
From the starting point that public officials and specialist administrative agencies affect most are...
According to traditional arguments, judicial review is a legitimate element of representative govern...
In his 2004 Horace E Read Memorial Lecture, David Mullan assesses the impact of the due process exp...
Ad hoc procedure” seems like an oxymoron. A traditional model of the civil justice system depicts co...
My contribution to this symposium will consist of the advancement of one main thesis and four subord...
Just now we seem to be at the crest of another wave of criticism of law\u27s delays. Once more jud...
Procedural reform seems to be a constant concern in most countries, but there are different modes of...
Bureaucracy and complexity are not pejorative terms, but they are limiting terms, and it makes sense...
There are many roads to injustice and administrative law is one of them. Modern administrative law s...
Shifting the procedural law of the Administrative Court is a necessity. This happened as an effort t...
Public policy theory generally studies two types of institutional change: major changes at critical ...
It is said that under our present practice, no matter how just the verdict and judgment of the court...
The substantive law of judicial review of administrative action has grown in leaps and bounds in rec...
My contribution to this symposium will consist of the advancement of one main thesis and four subord...
In these later days much is said about reforming the procedure of our courts, about recalllng our ju...
From the starting point that public officials and specialist administrative agencies affect most are...
According to traditional arguments, judicial review is a legitimate element of representative govern...
In his 2004 Horace E Read Memorial Lecture, David Mullan assesses the impact of the due process exp...
Ad hoc procedure” seems like an oxymoron. A traditional model of the civil justice system depicts co...
My contribution to this symposium will consist of the advancement of one main thesis and four subord...
Just now we seem to be at the crest of another wave of criticism of law\u27s delays. Once more jud...
Procedural reform seems to be a constant concern in most countries, but there are different modes of...
Bureaucracy and complexity are not pejorative terms, but they are limiting terms, and it makes sense...
There are many roads to injustice and administrative law is one of them. Modern administrative law s...
Shifting the procedural law of the Administrative Court is a necessity. This happened as an effort t...
Public policy theory generally studies two types of institutional change: major changes at critical ...