Available Formats
Allocating Authority: Who Should Do What in European and International Law
By (Author) Professor Joana Mendes
Edited by Associate Professor Ingo Venzke
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
28th May 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
340.9
Paperback
312
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
440g
The question of which European or international institution should exercise public authority is a highly contested one. This new collection offers an innovative approach to answering this vexed question. It argues that by viewing public authority as relative, it allows for greater understanding of both its allocation and its legitimacy. Furthermore, it argues that relations between actors should reflect the comparative analysis of the legitimacy assets that each actor can bring into governance processes. Put succinctly, the volume illustrates that public authority is relative between actors and relative to specific legitimacy assets. Drawing on the expertise of leading scholars in the field, it offers a thought-provoking and rigorous analysis of the long debated question of who should do what in European and international law.
Allocating Authority provides a timely and welcome collection of papers on an issue which is likely to feature heavily in any future reform debates in international and European contexts. This reviewer therefore recommends this text to international and European legal academics, practitioners and policy officers, particularly those working in the areas of constitutional law, administrative law and international economic law. -- Dire McCormack-George, Trinity College Dublin * European Law Review *
Joana Mendes is Professor of Comparative Administrative Law, University of Luxembourg. Ingo Venzke is Associate Professor of International Law, University of Amsterdam.