Administrative law and judicial deference / Matthew Lewans.
2016
K3175 .L49 2016 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Administrative law and judicial deference / Matthew Lewans.
Published
Portland, Oregon : Hart Publishing, 2016.
Call Number
K3175 .L49 2016
ISBN
9781849462778 (hardback)
1849462771 (hardback)
1849462771 (hardback)
Description
xxii, 249 pages ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)775416265
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 224-243) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
vii
Table of Cases
xi
Table of Legislation
xxi
1.
Question About Administrative Law
1
I.
Jurisdictional Error
2
II.
Judicial Deference
5
III.
Argument in Brief
10
2.
Rethinking the Diceyan Dialectic
14
I.
Diceyan Dialectic
16
II.
Rethinking the Diceyan Dialectic
27
A.
Berlin's Dilemma
28
B.
Dicey's Dilemma
31
III.
Revisiting the Question about Administrative Law
38
3.
Legacy of the Diceyan Dialectic
42
I.
Jurisdictional Error and the Diceyan Dialectic
44
A.
Deference as Submission
49
B.
Correctness Review
54
II.
Judicial Review and Public Law Theory
58
A.
Textbook Tradition
59
B.
Functionalism and the Political Constitution
65
C.
Recycling the Dialectic: The Ultra Vires Debate
70
III.
Proportionality and Judicial Deference
73
A.
Proportionality and Submissive Deference
80
B.
Proportionality and Correctness Review
85
IV.
Conclusion
86
4.
Constitutionalism, Judicial Restraint, and Administrative Law
90
I.
Constitutionalism and Judicial Restraint
94
A.
Democratic Constitutionalism
94
B.
Pragmatic Constitutionalism
103
II.
Judicial Restraint and Administrative Law
114
A.
Contextual Constitutionalism and the Administrative State
114
B.
Functionalism, Due Process, and Administrative Law
123
III.
Conclusion
134
5.
From Formalism to Reasonable Justification: The Transformation of Canadian Administrative Law
138
I.
Formal and Conceptual Era
141
A.
Constitution and the Administrative State
142
B.
Jurisdictional Error
148
II.
Pragmatic and Functional Era
156
A.
Procedural Fairness
159
B.
Judicial Deference
162
C.
Constitutional Right to Judicial Review
165
D.
Deference and Constitutional Rights
167
E.
Fairness and Reasonable Justification
171
III.
Dis-Functional Era
175
IV.
Conclusion
180
6.
Authority, Legitimacy, and Legality in Administrative Law
184
I.
Legitimate Authority and the Administrative State
188
A.
Law and Legitimate Authority
191
B.
Democratic Legitimacy and Legislative Authority
194
C.
Legislative Authority and Institutional Settlement
198
D.
Reciprocity and Democratic Legitimacy
201
II.
Legality and the Legitimacy of Administrative Law
207
A.
Formal Legality
211
B.
Legality as Fairness
214
C.
Legality as Reasonable Justification
217
III.
Administrative Law and Judicial Deference
221
Bibliography
224
Index
245