Public administration is to be regulated by parliamentary laws and to be monitored by the courts. At the same time, it frequently has to make complex decisions independently. Hinnerk Wißmann shows that in order to combine these premises of constitutional law, it will be impossible to do without blanket clauses.

The principle of 'lawfulnes' laid down in the constitution requires public administration to be regulated by parliamentary laws and to be monitored by the courts. Hinnerk Wißmann shows that fundamental rights in particular form a convincing basis from the perspective of the constitutional system and legal history for a corresponding comprehensive, formally rational distribution of state functions. In this case, the administration's 'independence' is the functional and the legal abutment of this basic order. Its managerial function can frequently not even be reconstructed in a model as an 'application' of laws. This means that the lawfulness of the administration must be developed further into a differentiating controlling and monitoring association. In doing so, it will be impossible to do without blanket clauses as a special type of regulation.

Autorentext
ist Geschäftsführender Direktor des Freiherr-vom-Stein-Instituts und Inhaber des Lehrstuhls für Ãffentliches Recht, Verwaltungswissenschaften, Kultur- und Religionsverfassungsrecht an der Universität Münster.
Titel
Generalklauseln
Untertitel
Verwaltungsbefugnisse zwischen Gesetzmäßigkeit und offenen Normen
EAN
9783161512544
ISBN
978-3-16-151254-4
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Hersteller
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
01.03.2008
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Jahr
2008
Untertitel
Deutsch
Lesemotiv