Law, Administrative Justice and the (non-) Emergence of Disputes
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Köp båda 2 för 2978 krThe quality of the research work...means that a very clear picture of how and why decisions are made is brought out...Anyone who has been heavily involved in making or challenging local authority decisions on homelessness applications should find this book interesting because of the extra layer of insight into the experiences of the people making those applications which it provides. Robert Sutherland SCOLAG Legal Journal, Issue 338 Dec 05 ...this well-conducted study, and the stimulating discussion of the findings, constitutes a valuable addition to our understanding of why systems of administrative justice are or are not used. Maurice Sunkin Public Law June 2004 The researchers..employed a variety of data collection methods, including a period of observation, followed by a period of interviewing unsuccessful homeless applicants, interviews and focus groups with local authority officers, as well as interviews with solicitors and housing advisers. This clearly enabled a rich variety of data to be collected, which is used to maximum effect throughout the book. Interview extracts provide a revealing and often poignant insight into the thinking of homeless applicants and illuminate the institutional response they face... The strength of this book undoubtedly lies in the richness of the data collected, and the thoroughness of its analysis. The book makes a valuable contribution to the literature on administrative justiceand its interest extends well beyond the housing and homelessness sphere. Emma Laurie Modern Law Review January 2005
Dave Cowan is Professor of Law and Policy in the School of Law, Bristol University. Simon Halliday is the Nicholas de B Katzenbach Research Fellow at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Oxford University. Caroline Hunter is a Senior Lecturer in Housing Law at the School of Environment and Development, Sheffield Hallam University. Paul Maginn is a Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Social Research, Edith Cowan University, Western Australia. Lisa Naylor was formerly a Research Assistant at the Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research at Sheffield Hallam University.
List of Tables 1. INTRODUCTION 2. HOMELESSNESS LAW AND INTERNAL REVIEW IN CONTEXT 3. SOUTHFIELD COUNCIL 4. BRISFORD COUNCIL 5. UNDERSTANDING THE FAILURE TO PURSUE INTERNAL REVIEW 6. UNDERSTANDING THE PURSUIT OF INTERNAL REVIEW 7. LAWYERS AND OTHER COPING STRATEGIES 8. CONCLUSION Bibliography