(145) Just as contract and property law may admit to
more judicial supervision than tort law, the need and possibility for effective legal supervision will vary in pockets of the administrative state.
Not exact matches
The aim, for example, to broaden the range of
judicial decisions that are made by non-judges (and even non-lawyers), under the «
supervision» of judges, is
more concerned with greater centralisation of services and with savings in the
judicial salaries budget.
First, if effective
supervision by the courts is the rationale for the duty to give reasons, wouldn't a duty arise in any case where the underlying decision is subject to
judicial review (which, nowadays, is
more or less all decisions)?
But at the very least it defines
more clearly the scope for
supervision of an employer's behaviour, the role of the employment tribunal and, as Collins (op cit, p 40) puts it, the principles for the settling of the boundaries for
judicial intervention.