Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Explaining Comparative Administrative Law: The Standing of Positive Political Theory

Chen, Benjamin Minhao; Li, Zhiyu

Authors

Benjamin Minhao Chen



Abstract

The principal-agent model of administrative law sees bureaucrats as imperfectly supervised agents of their political principals and courts as a tool used by the latter to monitor and check the former. This paper compares how the class of plaintiffs authorized to bring suit against governmental bodies has been defined in three countries where one should expect to find significant barriers to administrative litigation—Japan, Singapore, and the People’s Republic of China. Although these three Asian countries have traditionally been one-party dominated states, we do observe substantial differences in how legislatures and courts have addressed the issue of standing over time. It is possible to explain these variations by examining three factors. First, the local governments are, in some countries, sub-entities or agents of the national government. Thus, administrative law might be used to regulate the acts of local governments in addition to agencies, leading to broader notions of standing. Second, the level of political competition could influence the doctrine of standing by incentivizing political incumbents to secure alternative avenues for challenging the policies of their successors. Third, the legal process is not the only mechanism available for monitoring the behavior of agents. For example, the Administrative Management Agency, xinfang system, and “Meet the People Sessions” offer channels for non-judicial resolution of administrative disputes in Japan, China, and Singapore respectively. Yet courts and other monitoring mechanisms are not perfect substitutes; the different quality and quantity of the information collected, the creation of legal rules binding future decisions, and transaction costs of overriding judicial outcomes distinguish between them. This last factor is, in general, not easily resolved in one direction or another. The larger conclusion drawn is that Positive Political Theory, while insightful, may not always give an elegant structure to comparative studies in administrative law.

Citation

Chen, B. M., & Li, Z. (2016). Explaining Comparative Administrative Law: The Standing of Positive Political Theory. Washington international law journal, 25(1), 87-131

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 15, 2015
Online Publication Date Jan 1, 2016
Publication Date 2016
Deposit Date Sep 14, 2018
Journal Washington international law journal
Print ISSN 2377-0872
Electronic ISSN 2831-9370
Publisher University of Washington, School of Law
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 25
Issue 1
Pages 87-131
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1349026
Publisher URL https://www.washingtoninternationallawjournal.org/issues.html