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Global Administrative Law and EU Administrative Law

Relationships, Legal Issues and Comparison

  • Book
  • © 2011

Overview

  • The first book on the subject A new way to explore the administrative law beyond the state.
  • All original contributions It includes both cross-cutting and sectoral analysis of supranational regulatory regimes It describes nine regulatory regimes, including procurement, antitrust, banking, cultural heritage, pharmaceuticals and climate change.
  • A comparison of different models of administrative law beyond the state
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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Table of contents (18 chapters)

  1. Comparative Inquiries

  2. Comparative inquiries

  3. Developing Linkages and Networks

Keywords

About this book

This book seeks to enrich and refine global administrative law and EU administrative law analytical tools by examining their manifold relations. Its aim is to begin to explore the complex reality of the interactions between EU administrative law and global administrative law, to provide a preliminary map of such legal and institutional reality, and to review it. The book is the first attempt to analyze a dense area of new legal issues. The first part of the book contains core elements of a general theory of the relationships between global and EU administrative law: comparative inquiries, exchanges of legal principles, and developing linkages. The second part is devoted to special regulatory regimes, in which global and European law coexist, though not always peacefully. Several sectors are considered: cultural heritage, medicines, climate change, antitrust, accounting and auditing, banking supervision, and public procurement.

Editors and Affiliations

  • , Dipartimento di Scienze Giuridiche, Università degli Studi della Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy

    Edoardo Chiti

  • , Dipartimento di diritto pubblico, Università di Siena, Roma, Italy

    Bernardo Giorgio Mattarella

About the editors

Edoardo Chiti (LL.M. University College London, Ph.D. European University Institute) is Professor of European Union Law at the University of La Tuscia, Italy.

Bernardo Giorgio Mattarella (LL.M. University of California at Berkeley, Ph.D. University of Florence) is Professor of administrative law at the University of Siena and at the National School for Public Administration in Rome, Italy.

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