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General Comparative Report
(2012)
Although the Council of Europe has been working in the area of administrative law for decades, the body of pan-European general principles of good administration developed by this organisation remains mostly uncharted. This paper attempts to help fill this academic gap by examining the scope and content of the pan-European principles of administrative law stemming from the Council of Europe, with a special emphasis on the principle of good administration. In doing so, the sources of administrative law of the Council of Europe are considered together with the mechanisms by which they penetrate and permeate domestic legal systems. This paper concludes that the work done by the Council of Europe in the administrative field has contributed to a process of harmonisation in its Member States’ domestic law, but that the exact scope thereof has yet to be uncovered and requires further research.
Workshop organised in Rome by Professor G. della Cananea (Common core principles of administrative law, 1st December). Summary available here: https://europeancommonwealth.org/2018/01/08/account-workshop-fin-de-siecle-administrative-law-judicial-standards-for-public-authorities-1890-1910/. Paper will be submitted later in 2018 for publication in an edited volume.
Transparency in France
(2017)
European Conference Public Administration (EGPA), Milan, 30th August-1st September, panel on Law and Administration (organised by D Drago, B Marseille and P Kovac). Paper from this presentation to be published with E Slautsky, ‘Freedom of Information in France’, in D Drago, B Marseille and P Kovac (eds), The Laws of Transparency in Action: A European Perspective (Palgrave) (ca. 17,000 words, submitted), a significantly longer version of this paper is available on ResearchGate and SSRN (ca. 22,000 words). The SSRN paper was included in the Top Ten List for “PSN: Public Administration (Institutions)” on 04.10.2017 and in the Top Ten List for “International Administrative Law eJournal” on 19.10.2017.
I-CONN Conference, 5th July, Copenhagen, Panel coordinated by C. Colombo and M. Eliantonio (“The Changing nature of the public administration; what role of judicial review?”). Paper from this presentation to be published with S Van Garsse under the title ‘Revisiting judicial review in the face of the changing nature of public administration – A case study drawn from European infrastructure projects’, submitted to European Public Law (special issue) (guest editors: Dr C Colombo and Dr M Eliantonio) (second stage of proof-reading).
UK report
(2017)
UK report in XL Table ronde organised by Aix-en-provence Centre de recherches administratives on 3rd-4th November 2017 on Citizens-administration: 40 years of evolution (summary available here: https://europeancommonwealth.org/2017/11/21/account-citizens-administration-40-years-of-administrative-reforms-aix-en-provence/). Paper to be submitted in April 2018 – for publication in Annuaire européen d’administration publique.
Vom 22. bis 23. Juni 2017 fand an der Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam im Rahmen des Forschungsnetzwerks Public Contracts in Legal Globalization ein Workshop zum Thema „The impact of competitive tendering and its regulation on the formation and execution of public contracts and concessions” statt. Im Rahmen der Veranstaltung referierte Univ.-Prof. Dr. Ulrich Stelkens, der Mitglied des Steering Committees dieses Netzwerks ist, über den Ist-Stand in Deutschland.
Masterkurs "General Principles of Administrative Law" an der Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University (TSU). Im Rahmen des gemeinsamen Masterprogramms der Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University (Tiflis, Georgien) und der Universität Speyer hat Univ.-Prof. Dr. Ulrich Stelkens in Tiflis erneut die Veranstaltung "General Principles of Administrative Law" angeboten.
Working Group 2.1.: "Common European Principles of Administrative Law and Good Administration”
(2019)
Common European Principles of Administrative Law and “Good Administration” / EU Administrative Law and ‘Unionalisation’ of National Administrative Law / Functions of Administrative Law / European Administrative Law = EU Administrative Law? / ReNEUAL Working Group 2.1:
“Common European Principles of Administrative Law and Good Administration” / Specialties of EU Administrative Law
Lecture at Vilnius University.
§ 1 European Administrative Law and EU Administrative Law: Specialties of EU Administrative Law / EU Administrative Law and ‘Unionalisation’ of National Administrative Law / Functions of Administrative Law / European Administrative Law = EU Administrative Law? / „Speyer Understanding“ of European Administrative Law
§ 2 Administrative Law and the Council of Europe:
Aims, Organs and Instruments of the Council of Europe / European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and its Impact of Administrative Law /
Other Conventions in Terms of Art. 15 (1) of the Statute of the Council of Europe / Recommendations of the Committee of Ministers of the CoE Concerning Administrative Law / Concept of Pan-European General Principles of Good Administration
Limited Right to Appeal in German Administrative Court Proceedings - A (fake) Success Story of what?
(2019)
The following topics are being discussed: The German Court System / Reform of the Access to the Higher Courts of Appeal in 1996 / Reasons given for limiting the Access to the Higher Courts of Appeal in 1996 / How to measure Success of limiting the Access to the Higher Courts of Appeal? / Do the Reasons given for limiting the Access to the Higher Courts of Appeal make sense? / Lessons to be learned from the German Example
- The concept of a three-tiered structure of administrative courts has been developed from 1949 onwards in the Western part of Germany
- Extremely difficult economic situation, need to built up nearly every infrastructure, very complex legal situation - Nevertheless clear decision of the drafters of the constitution to create effective judicial protection in administrative matters as a reaction to the horrors of the Nazi regime and the Stalinist developments in the Soviet occupation zone
- What does this mean for reforms of administrative court proceedings today?
The Council of Europe (CoE) has a long-standing record of promoting standards of good administration in the European legal space. Today, these standards encapsulate the entire range of general organisational, procedural and substantive legal institutions meant to ensure a democratically legitimised, open and transparent administration respecting the rule of law. Therefore, these standards are about the ‘limiting function’ of administrative law, that is, its function to protect individuals from arbitrary power, to legitimise administrative action and to combat corruption and nepotism and other ‘diseases’ with which even a democratic polity willing to be governed by the rule of law may be infected. These CoE standards can be described as ‘pan-European principles of good administration.
This book is about the existence and effectiveness of written and unwritten standards of good administration developed within the framework of the Council of Europe (CoE). It analyses the (possible) impact of these standards on and their added value for the domestic administrative law of the CoE’s forty-seven Member States (representing more than 800 million people). This book argues that these standards, called here the ‘pan-European general principles of good administration’
The article introduces a research project carried out at the German Research Institute of Public Administration and the German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer. It examines the development, content and effectiveness of the written and unwritten standards of good administration drawn up within the framework of the Council of Europe (CoE).