000 01184nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c161293
_d161293
005 20220822102938.0
008 200208s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a421270608
082 _a342.41066 CRA
100 _aCraig, P. P.
245 0 _aAdministrative law
260 _aLondon
260 _bSweet and Maxwell
260 _c1983
300 _a636 p.
520 _aVirtually no facet of modern life remains unaffected by government and administrative activity. From the parishes and boards of the nineteenth century to the councils, corporations and quangos of today, administrative machinery has evolved to meet the demands of increasing government involvement. Rule-making and adjudica tory decision-making, to which we are all subject, has vastly increased: to cite the growth of the welfare state, planning and licensing legislation and the proliferation of tribunals would be to name but a few aspects. The traditional conceptual basis of administrative law has come under increasing strain, and is unable to accommodate the developments which have taken place. A new framework is required.
650 _aAdministrative law- Great Britain
942 _cDB
_2ddc