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Building: A, Floor: 1, Room: SR1
Tuesday 11:15 - 13:00 CEST (23/08/2022)
Individuals’ right to appeal decisions made by governments and public agencies to courts is considered necessary for an efficient monitoring of the regulatory welfare state. How courts carry out such judicial review over administrative and political decision-making has implications for individual appellants, the allocation of public resources and the legitimacy of the judicial system. This panel invites contributions connected to how courts review procedural and substantive aspects of administrative and political decisions. Contributions may focus on how judges determine individuals’ need for welfare benefits, how judges understand judicial principles such as equality before the law and, how individual appellants experience the court proceedings.
Title | Details |
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Judicial Review of Regulatory Matters: Divergences and Boundaries between Courts and Regulatory Agencies | View Paper Details |
The Brazilian Supreme Federal Court (STF) and the Public Measures for Covid-19 Prevention and Treatment | View Paper Details |
Administrative courts and allocative choices: limiting local governments’ decision-making power | View Paper Details |
Juridification, discretionary power and the moral universe of public sector professionalism | View Paper Details |
Revisiting the competence question in judicial review of resource allocation | View Paper Details |