| Papers on Comparative Administrative Law to be presented at the Law & Society Association annual meeting in San Francisco, June 3, 2011. |
Five Models of Administrative Adjudication
By Michael Asimow
Visiting Professor of Law, Stanford Law School; Professor of Law Emeritus, UCLA School of Law
The Private Prison Controversy and the Privatization Continuum
By Daphne Barak-Erez
Professor of Law and Stewart and Judy Colton Chair of Law and Security, Faculty of Law, Tel-Aviv University
Minimum Standards of Procedural Justice in Administrative Adjudication
By Giacinto della Cananea
Professor of administrative law at the Faculty of political sciences, University of Naples “Federico II”
Stakes of independence of adjudication and judicial review in France and the US
By Dominique Custos
Judge John D. Wessel Distinguished Professor of Law, Loyola University New Orleans
Design Matters: The Case of Mexican Administrative Courts
By Ana Elena Fierro Ferráez and Adriana García García
Associate Professor at Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas in Mexico City
Manning the Gates: Standing Doctrine as a Barrier to Judicial Policing of Agency Action in the United States, Germany, and the European Union
By William Funk
Robert E. Jones Professor of Law, Lewis & Clark Law School
Comparing the Role of Public Participation and Transparency in Norm Creation within the Executive Branches of the European Union and United States
By Linda Jellum
Associate Professor of Law, Mercer University of Law
Merging European and US Rulemaking Strategies
By Charles H. Koch, Jr.
Dudley W. Woodbridge Professor of Law
Suing the Government in China
By Neysun A. Mahboubi
Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Connecticut School of Law
What’s the Matter with the EU ‘Going Local’? Subsidiarity, Decentralization and Development in Third Level Europe
By Fernanda Nicola
Associate Professor of Law, Washington College of Law American University
Innovations in Governance: A Functional Typology of Private Governance Institutions
By Tracey M. Roberts
Assistant Professor, University of Louisville, Brandeis School of Law
Combining Domestic and Global Administrative Law
By David Zaring
Assistant Professor of Legal Studies and Business Ethics, The Wharton School University of Pennsylvania
