- Course Code :
LAW 301
- Level :
Undergraduate
- Course Hours :
3.00
Hours
- Department :
Department of Public Administration
Instructor information :
Area of Study :
This course discusses the relationship between "Economics and Political Science" and "Administrative Law" from a legal point of view, in an interactive atmosphere, introducing the dual court system, and identifying the jurisdiction of the Egyptian State Council and its historical development, laying down the main types of administrative activities, the general characteristics of administrative law, rules organizing the relationship among different administrative agencies, and the extent of the administration responsibility within a comparative approach.
Course Goals:
• Understanding the legal dimension of the relationship economics and political science.
• Interpret how the jurisdictions of the Egyptian state council work as well as the mechanisms that define the historical development related to it.
• Analyze the characteristics that shape the administrative law as well as the rules organizing the relationship among different administrative agencies
For further information :
This course discusses the relationship between "Economics and Political Science" and "Administrative Law" from a legal point of view, in an interactive atmosphere, introducing the dual court system, and identifying the jurisdiction of the Egyptian State Council and its historical development, laying down the main types of administrative activities, the general characteristics of administrative law, rules organizing the relationship among different administrative agencies, and the extent of the administration responsibility within a comparative approach.
For further information :
Books:
Recommended books :
Steven Cann, Administrative Law. Thousand, Calif: Sage Publications, Oaks, 1998
Periodicals :
Wilson M. Martin and Jennifer A. Blackburn. Administrative Law. Mercer Law Review Vol. 65, No.1, 2013.
John Paul Jones and Afsana Chowdhury, Administrative Law, University of Richmond Law Review, Vol. 47, No.1, 2012.
For further information :