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Book

Coordinating Ombudsmen and the Judiciary: A comparative view on the relations between ombudsmen and the judiciary in the Netherlands, England and the European Union



Although the protection of individuals' interests against administrative actions is still primarily the domain of the judiciary, most legal systems nowadays also assign this task to ombudsmen. This can potentially lead to tension between the two institutions and can affect their relations, and therefore needs coordination. This book investigates whether relations between the judiciary and ombudsmen exist at all, how their respective tasks and competences influence one another, and how they are coordinated. It contains a comprehensive and comparative study on the coordination of the relations between ombudsmen and the judiciary in three considerably different legal systems, namely the Netherlands, England, and the European Union. The book identifies three levels of possible coordination: institutional coordination, case coordination, and normative coordination. It explores and compares the statutory rules, the case law of the judiciary, and ombudsprudence. In addition, it draws from experiences shared through interviews with ombudsmen, judges, and employees of ombudsman offices. In doing so, the book demonstrates that several improvements to the ombudsmen-judiciary relations are required. (Series: Ius Commune Europaeum - Vol. 125)


Detail Information

Call Number
11 COO mil
Publisher Intersentia : United kingdom.,
Collation
xiv, 407 p.; 23.5 cm
Language
English
Classification
11 COO mil
ISBN/ISSN
978-1-78068-218-1
Edition
-
Subject(s)