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The Regulatory State
Constitutional Implications
Edited by Dawn Oliver, Tony Prosser, and Richard Rawlings
368 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-959317-0
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Hardback
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02 December 2010
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This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- Provides comprehensive coverage of topical issues, including the credit crisis, climate change, and the reform of regulatory sanctions
- Using full references to and summaries of extensive judicial review case law, it gives a thorough summary and analysis of judicial review cases in regulation
- Offers a comparative study of developments in the UK, the EU, and the US
This collection of fifteen essays by leading experts in regulation is unique in its focus on the constitutional implications of recent regulatory developments in the UK, the EU, and the US. The chapters reflect current developments and crises which are significant in many areas of public policy, not only regulation. These include the development of governance in place of government in many policy areas, the emergence of networks of public and private actors, the credit crunch, techniques for countering climate change, the implications for fundamental rights of regulatory arrangements and the development of complex accountability mechanisms
designed to promote policy objectives.
Constitutional issues discussed include regulatory governance, models of economic and social regulation, non-parliamentary rule-making, the UK's devolution arrangements and regulation, the credit crisis, the rationing of common resources, regulation and fundamental rights, the European Competition Network, private law making and European integration, innovative regulator sanctions recently introduced in the UK, the auditing of regulatory reform, and parliamentary oversight and judicial review of regulators. The introductory chapter focuses on testing times for regulation, and the concluding chapter draws ten lessons from the substantive chapters, noting the importance of regulatory diversity, the complexity of networks and
relations between regulatory actors and the executive, the new challenges to regulatory habits posed by climate change and the credit crisis, the wider economic and legal context in which regulation takes place and the accountability networks - including judicial review, parliamentary oversight and audit - within which regulation operates.Readership: Students and academics working in the law, politics and economics of regulation.
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Edited by Dawn Oliver, Emeritus Professor of Constitutional Law, University College London, Tony Prosser, Professor of Public Law, University of Bristol, and Richard Rawlings, Professor of Public Law, University College, London Contributors: Julia Black, Professor of Law at the London School of Economics and Political Science and a Research Associate of the Centre for Analysis of Risk and Regulation at the LSE Fabrizio Cafaggi, Professor of Comparative Law, European University Institute, Fiesole Cosmo Graham, Professor of Law, University of Leicester Ed Humpherson, Assistant
Auditor General, National Audit Office Aileen McHarg, Senior Lecturer in Public Law, University of Glasgow Richard Macrory, Barrister, Professor of Environmental Law, University College, London Imelda Maher, Sutherland Professor of European Law, School of Law and Dublin European Institute, University College Dublin Dawn Oliver, Professor of Constitutional Law, University College London Tony Prosser, Professor of Public Law, University of Bristol Richard Rawlings, Professor of Public Law, University College London Colin Scott, Professor of EU Regulation and Governance at University College Dublin, and a visiting Professor at the College of Europe, Bruges Michael Smyth CBE, Partner, Head of Public
Policy, Clifford Chance LLP Oana Stefan, Doctoral Candidate, School of Law, University College Dublin Peter Strauss, Betts Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, USA and Fernand Braudel Senior Fellow at the European University Institute, Fiesole, Italy Gerd Winter, Professor of Public Law and the Sociology of Law, University of Bremen
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1: Richard Rawlings: Introduction: Testing Times
2: Colin Scott: Regulatory Governance and the Challenge of Constitutionalism
3: Tony Prosser: Models of Economic and Social Regulation
4: Peter Strauss: Rule Making and the American Constitution
5: Aileen McHarg: Devolution and the Regulatory State: Constraints and Opportunities
6: Julia Black: The Credit Crisis and the Constitution
7: Gerd Winter: Rationing the Use of Common Resources: Design, Effectiveness and Constitutional Implications of an Ambivalent Regulatory Tool
8: Cosmo Graham: Fundamental Rights and the Regulatory State
9: Imelda Maher and Oana Stefan: Competition Law in Europe: The Challenge of a Network Constitution
10: Fabrizio Cafaggi: Private Law-making and European Integration: Where Do They Meet, When Do They Conflict?
11: Richard Macrory: Reforming Regulatory Sanctions - Designing a Systematic Approach
12: Dawn Oliver: Regulation, Democracy and Democratic Oversight
13: Ed Humpherson: Auditing Regulatory Reform
14: Richard Rawlings: Changed Conditions, Old Truths: Judicial Review in a Regulatory Laboratory
15: Tony Prosser: Conclusion
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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