From
the perspective of any administrative decision - maker, isn't the import of this sort of decision that it is better to provide coherent reasons to survive substantive judicial review?
Not exact matches
He obtained his BA and LLB (both with distinction) from the University
of the Witwatersrand, BCL (with distinction)- with emphasis on International Arbitration and Civil Procedure - and MLitt (Thesis title: Ultra vires representations and unlawful
decisions in English
administrative law, in comparative
perspective) from the University
of Oxford, UK.
From the
perspective of the individual affected by an
administrative decision, isn't it quite unimportant whether this is a matter
of procedural review or substantive review?
Gerald Heckman, «Inquisitorial Approaches to Refugee Protection
Decision - making: the Australian Experience and Possible Lessons for Canada» in Laverne Jacobs & Sasha Baglay, eds, The Nature
of Inquisitorial Processes in
Administrative Regimes — Global
Perspectives (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate Publishing, 2013).