TY - CHAP U1 - Buchbeitrag A1 - Marique, Yseult ED - Hertogh, Marc L. M. ED - Kirkham, Richard ED - Thomas, Robert ED - Tomlinson, Joe T1 - The Rule of Law and Administrative Justice T2 - The Oxford Handbook of Administrative Justice N2 - Administrative justice and the rule of law have often been in tension. However, they have converged over time as the scope of administrative justice and the conceptions of the rule of law have shifted. This chapter starts with the historical connections between administrative justice and the rule of law. It then maps ways in which the rule of law is expressed when ad-ministrative justice is embedded within administrative organization and when it is organized as a system external to the administration. This approach highlights the diversity of technical solutions to recurring questions across three major administrative systems (namely England, France, and the United States). This analysis also leads to highlighting two new challenges for the rule of law: first, how the rule of law responds to various forms of increasing administra-tive repression, and second, how the rule of law responds to globalization at a time when no coherent global administrative justice system exists. Y1 - 2022 UN - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0246-opus4-59376 SN - 978-0-19-090308-4 SB - 978-0-19-090308-4 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190903084.013.16 DO - https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190903084.013.16 SP - 305 EP - 328 PB - Oxford University Press CY - New York, NY ER -