The Great Depression contributed to the rapid growth in the size and functions of the administrative state. While its importance for administrative law scholarship was greater in America than in Australia or the United Kingdom, it focused scholars everywhere on questions of the democratic legitimacy of government institutions functioning beyond any practical oversight of Parliament. The current global economic crisis poses similar questions. New banking laws permit forced sales and nationalisation in the UK, and the laws relating to compensation for government interventions in both Australia and the UK carry the potential for serious unfairness. Vast government stimulus programs contain few legal constraints or genuine oversight mechanisms. These are issues warranting the attention of administrative law scholars.
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Aronson on the Great Depression and Administrative Law
Mark I. Aronson, Law Faculty, University of New South Wales, has posted The Great Depression, this Depression, and Administrative Law, which also appears in the Federal Law Review 37 (2009). Here's the abstract: