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Accountability in the Regulatory State
Author(s)
Date Issued
2000
Date Available
2015-08-05T16:18:53Z
Abstract
Accountability has long been both a key theme and a key problem in constitutional scholarship. The centrality of the accountability debates in contemporary political and legal discourse is a product of the difficulty of balancing the autonomy given to those exercising public power with appropriate control. The traditional mechanisms of accountability to Parliament and to the courts are problematic because in a complex administrative state, characterized by widespread delegation of discretion to actors located far from the centre of government, the conception of centralized responsibility upon which traditional accountability mechanisms are based is often fictional. The problems of accountability have been made manifest by the transformations wrought on public administration by the new public management (NPM) revolution which have further fragmented the public sector. In this article it is argued that if public lawyers are to be reconciled to these changes then it will be through recognizing the potential for additional or extended mechanisms of accountability in supplementing or displacing traditional accountability functions. The article identifies and develops two such extended accountability models: interdependence and redundancy.
Other Sponsorship
Economic and Social Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Journal of Law and Society
Volume
27
Issue
1
Start Page
38
End Page
60
Copyright (Published Version)
2000 Blackwell Publishers Ltd
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
AccountabilityRegState.pdf
Size
389.17 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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