EU Administrative Law
Over the last decades, the European Union has developed a series of ad hoc administrative procedures for the direct implementation of its rules in a number of areas - such as competition policy, trade policy, sate aids, access to EU documents, the EU civil service - , which resulted in a fragmented body of rules, whether in the form of law or soft law. The need to depart from this sector-specific approach to ensure consistent EU administrative procedures has therefore started to be debated in the academic sector as well as within the EU institutions. In this respect, following the entry into force of a new legal basis on administrative law introduced by the Lisbon Treaty the European Parliament has called for the adoption of a single European Administrative Procedure binding on its institutions, bodies, agency and offices including enforceable procedural rights for citizens when dealing with the Union's direct administration.
At a Glance
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Publication type
Author
Policy area
Keyword
- access to information
- administration of the Institutions
- administrative procedure
- case law (EU)
- citizen-authority relations
- data protection
- EDUCATION AND COMMUNICATIONS
- EU institutions and European civil service
- EU law
- EUROPEAN UNION
- European Union law
- executive power and public service
- information and information processing
- information technology and data processing
- justice
- LAW
- legislative initiative
- parliamentary proceedings
- POLITICS
- rights of the defence
- Treaty of Lisbon