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Reimagining Administrative Justice - Human Rights in Small Places (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
Loot Price: R1,629
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Reimagining Administrative Justice - Human Rights in Small Places (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
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'In their beautifully written book, O'Brien and Doyle tell a story
of small places - where human rights and administrative justice
matter most. A human rights discourse is cleverly intertwined with
the debates about the relationship between the citizen and the
state and between citizens themselves. O'Brien and Doyle re-imagine
administrative justice with the ombud institution at its core. This
book is a must read for anyone interested in a democratic vision of
human rights deeply embedded within the administrative justice
system.'-Naomi Creutzfeldt, University of Westminster, UK 'Doyle
and O'Brien's book makes an important and timely contribution to
the growing literature on administrative justice, and breaks new
ground in the way that it re-imagines the field. The book is
engagingly written and makes a powerful case for reform, drawing on
case studies and examples, and nicely combining theory and
practice. The vision the authors provide of a more potent and
coherent approach to administrative justice will be a key reference
point for scholars, policymakers and practitioners working in this
field for years to come.'-Dr Chris Gill, Lecturer in Public Law,
University of Glasgow 'This immensely readable book ambitiously and
successfully re-imagines adminstrative justice as an instrument of
institutional reform, public trust, social rights and political
friendship. It does so by expertly weaving together many disparate
motifs and threads to produce an elegant tapestry illustrating a
remaking of administrative justice as a set of principles with the
ombud institution at its centre.'-Carolyn Hirst, Independent
Researcher and Mediator, Hirstworks This book reconnects everyday
justice with social rights. It rediscovers human rights in the
'small places' of housing, education, health and social care, where
administrative justice touches the citizen every day, and in doing
so it re-imagines administrative justice and expands its democratic
reach. The institutions of everyday justice - ombuds, tribunals and
mediation - rarely herald their role in human rights frameworks,
and never very loudly. For the most part, human rights and
administrative justice are ships that pass in the night. Drawing on
design theory, the book proposes to remedy this alienation by
replacing current orthodoxies, not least that of 'user focus', with
more promising design principles of community, network and
openness. Thus re-imagined, the future of both administrative
justice and social rights is demosprudential, firmly rooted in
making response to citizen grievance more democratic and embedding
legal change in the broader culture.
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