1st Edition

Comparative Administrative Law Perspectives from Central and Eastern Europe

Edited By Ieva Deviatnikovaitė Copyright 2024
270 Pages
by Routledge

270 Pages
by Routledge

270 Pages
by Routledge

This book presents the origins, doctrine, institutions, and challenges confronting modern administrative law in Central and Eastern European countries. Administrative law was first defined by a Polish lawyer in the 19th century, but for historical reasons, there has been little scholarship on the subject in relation to countries in the region in recent times. This book fills this gap in the... Read more

List of Contributors

Preface

Ieva Deviatnikovaitė

1 Administrative Law in the Czech Republic

Lukaš Potěšil and Tomaš Svoboda

2 Administrative Law in Hungary

Gabor Hulko

3 Administrative Law in Latvia

Jautrīte Briede and Edvīns Danovskis

4 Administrative Law in Lithuania

Simona Bareikytė, Ieva Deviatni kovait ė, Violeta Kosmačaitė, and Linas Meškys

5 Administrative Law in Poland

Marcin Dąbrowski, Marta Kopac z, Dorota Lis-Starano wicz, and Monika Ziniewicz

6 Administrative Law in the Slovak Republic

Juraj Vačok

7 Administrative Law in Ukraine

Yuliia Vashchenko

Comparative Remarks

Ieva Deviatnikovaitė and Simona Bareikytė

Index

Biography

Ieva Deviatnikovaitė is a professor of administrative law at Mykolas Romeris University, Lithuania. Her research is focused on national administrative law, comparative administrative law, and legal history. She has published widely on these and related issues.

"The book Comparative Administrative Law: Perspectives from Central and Eastern Europe is a timely and important collective contribution to the research in the field of administrative law in Central and Eastern European countries. . . . [It] will appeal to different audiences: researchers who specialise in different aspects of administrative law will find it useful for their systemic and comparative analysis; practitioners will find plenty of practical information on how administrative law is practised in these countries; while students could use it to deepen their knowledge of different aspects of administrative law."

Dr. Irmantas Jarukaitis, Judge of the Court of Justice of the European Union