
The development of an autonomous English public law has been accompanied by persistent problems--a lack of systematic principles, dissatisfaction with judicial procedures, and uncertainty about the judicial role. It has provoked an ongoing debate on the very desirability of the distinction between public and private law. In this debate, an historical and comparative perspective has been lacking. A Continental Distinction in the Common Law introduces such a perspective. It compares the recent emergance of a significant English distinction with the entranchment of the traditional French distinction. It explains how persistent problems of English public law are related to fundamental differences between the English and French legal and political traditions, differences in their conception of the state administration, their approach to law, their separation of powers, and their judicial procedures in public-law cases. The author argues that a satisfactory distinction between public and private law depends on a particular legal and political context, a context which was evident in late-nineteenth-century France and is absent in twentieth-century England. He concludes by identifying the far-reaching theoretical, institutional, and procedural changes required to accommodate English public law.
This book investigates whether the distinction between public and private law, a hallmark of Continental legal systems, can or should be successfully integrated into the English common law tradition. J. W. F. Allison, a scholar of legal history and administrative law, utilizes a comparative framework to analyze the structural differences between English and French legal systems. By examining the historical development of state administration and judicial procedures in both nations, the author argues that the English legal environment lacks the specific political and institutional context necessary to support a formal public-private law distinction. The text posits that attempting to force this distinction upon the English system necessitates significant, and perhaps undesirable, theoretical and procedural shifts.
What You Will Find
Legal scholars and practitioners frequently cite this work as a foundational text for understanding the structural tensions within English administrative law. Experts highlight the author's rigorous historical methodology as a critical resource for those studying the divergence between common law and civil law traditions.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
1996-05-23
Publisher:
Clarendon Press
ISBN-10:
0198258771
ISBN-13:
9780198258773
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