Public Administration and LawRoutledge, 2015 M02 12 - 280 pages Public Administration and Law has been edited for use as a supplement for an undergraduate or MPA level course on administrative law. The selections, all from the pages of Public Administration Review, have been chosen to enlighten and enliven the contents of any standard administrative law textbook. Each of the book's main sections begins with introductory text and discussion questions by the volume editors, Julia Beckett and Heidi Koenig, followed by relevant readings from PAR. The book's contents follow the standard pattern established by the field's major textbooks to facilitate the instructor's ability to assign readings that illuminate lectures and text material. The book concludes with two invaluable resources - a bibliography of 65 years of PAR articles concerning public law, plus a bibliography of law-related articles appearing in other journals published by ASPA. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 41
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... developed in a democratic, participatory manner. Courts serve the general public and public servants in many ways. They referee disputes and make law. They decide issues based on arguments in a manner that provides administrative ...
... developed in a democratic, participatory manner. Courts serve the general public and public servants in many ways. They referee disputes and make law. They decide issues based on arguments in a manner that provides administrative ...
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... developed predominantly through analysis of appellate court decisions. In this context, law is often technical and specific. Administrators, in carrying out law and implementing policy, may interpret law differently from lawyers. In ...
... developed predominantly through analysis of appellate court decisions. In this context, law is often technical and specific. Administrators, in carrying out law and implementing policy, may interpret law differently from lawyers. In ...
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... developed a wide scope of governmental activities, which Rosenbloom calls “the administrative state.” Along with this expansion of the administrative state, administrative law developed through both legislation and court cases. The ...
... developed a wide scope of governmental activities, which Rosenbloom calls “the administrative state.” Along with this expansion of the administrative state, administrative law developed through both legislation and court cases. The ...
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... developed over time and has many important implications for public administration. Chapters in later parts of this book return to these themes of the interrelationship among procedures, practices, and powers of the executive ...
... developed over time and has many important implications for public administration. Chapters in later parts of this book return to these themes of the interrelationship among procedures, practices, and powers of the executive ...
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... developed from an analysis of apparent empirical reality. Once public administration is considered a political endeavor, emphasis is inevitably placed on a different set of values than those promoted by the managerial approach ...
... developed from an analysis of apparent empirical reality. Once public administration is considered a political endeavor, emphasis is inevitably placed on a different set of values than those promoted by the managerial approach ...
Contents
Response to John Rohr | |
Congress | |
The Relationships Between Courts and Administrators | |
Free Speech | |
Judicial Lawmaking and Administration | |
The Politics of Administrative Rulemaking | |
Who is Due Process? | |
Participation and Staff Recommendations on Regulatory Decision Making | |
Managing the Freedom of Information Act and Federal Information | |
Administrators and Conflict Resolution | |
Challenges for Public | |
A Conflict Resolution Approach to Public Administration | |
The Role of Law in Public Administration | |
The Politics of Partnership | |
The Changing Relationship of Judges | |
Government Operations and Administrative | |
The Dissolution of Judicial Supervision | |
The Neglected | |
Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
accountability action adjudication administrative law Administrative Procedure Act agency agency’s alternative dispute resolution Amendment American appeals arbitration authority budget bureaucracy challenges city attorney city managers Commission commissioners Committee concerns conflict resolution Congress congressional court decisions denial Department desegregation developed discretion dormant Commerce Clause due process effective employee Environmental equality executive branch executive power federal administration federal courts FOIA Forest Service functions governmental hearing implementation individual institutions interest involvement issues judges judicial Justice KCMSD legislative litigation managerial National negotiation nursing home O’Leary Office organization organizational parties percent permits political President President’s problems professional autonomy programs protection Public Administration Review public administrative theory reform regulations regulatory relationship requirements responsibility role Rosenbloom rulemaking rules sector separation of powers social equity staff recommendations statutes statutory structure subcommittees termination theory U.S. Congress U.S. Constitution U.S. Supreme Court Washington waste York