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Review of European Administrative Law (REALaw)
2024 / 1 (april) 1
  • Stéphanie De Somer - Associate professor of administrative law, University of Antwerp

    Special issue ‘Proof in Administrative Law’: Editorial online pdf
Articles
  • Stéphanie De Somer - Associate professor of administrative law, University of Antwerp, Annelien Stijleman - Doctoral Researcher Research Fund, University of Antwerp (BOF)

    Proof in administrative law: introduction and comparative insights online pdf
  • Annelien Stijleman - Doctoral Researcher Research Fund, University of Antwerp (BOF)

    Proof of the Facts in Belgian Administrative Law: An Analysis of the Case Law of the Belgian Council of State online pdf
  • Caroline Expert-Foulquier - Associate Professor in public law, University of Limoges

    Proof of facts in administrative law in France: many ad hoc and ex post rules of evidence, but for how long? online pdf
  • Katharina Reiling - Professor of Public Law, Universität Bremen

    Proof in Administrative Law: the German Perspective online pdf
  • Professor Y. E. Schuurmans - Professor of Constitutional and Administrative Law, Leiden University

    Proof in Dutch Administrative Law online pdf
  • Stéphanie De Somer - Associate professor of administrative law, University of Antwerp, Annelien Stijleman - Doctoral Researcher Research Fund, University of Antwerp (BOF)

    The ‘Europeanization’ of the rules and principles on proof in domestic administrative law online pdf
Case Review
  • Dr Jakub Kerlin - Member of the Legal Service of the Single Resolution Board., Dariusz Ceran - Member of the Legal Service of the Single Resolution Board

    Obligation to State Reasons: Clear Principle with (Still) Unclear Scope? In Search of an Adequate Standard of Reasoning for a Decision Based on Confidential Data (Joined Cases C-584/20 P and C-621/20 P Commission and SRB v Landesbank Baden-Württemberg) online pdf
Book Reviews
  • Annemarie Drahmann - Associate Professor, Department of Constitutional and Administrative Law, Leiden University

    Felix Uhlmann (ed.), Codification of Administrative Law: A Comparative Study on the Sources of Administrative Law, Oxford: Hart Publishing 2023, ISBN 978-1-50995-492-6, Identifier b-9781509954957, open access online pdf
  • Sarah Tas - Sarah Tas, Assistant Professor of European and Comparative Administrative Law, Department of Public Law, Maastricht University.

    Evangelia (Lilian) Tsourdi and Philippe De Bruycker (Eds.), Research Handbook on EU Migration and Asylum Law. Edward Elgar, 2022. ISBN: 9781786439628 online pdf

The ‘Europeanization’ of the rules and principles on proof in domestic administrative law

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Stéphanie De Somer - Associate professor of administrative law, University of Antwerp, Annelien Stijleman - Doctoral Researcher Research Fund, University of Antwerp (BOF)*


Abstract

In this article, we examine the impact of both EU law and the European Convention on Human Rights on rules and principles of proof in domestic administrative law, ie at member state or contracting state level. In both cases, that influence has been subtle and incremental. It follows mostly from case law that has increasingly been deriving duties for administrations and (administrative) courts from general principles of good administration or adjudication or in the process of interpreting legislation. The issues relating to proof on which the Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Court of Human Rights have thus far given their view are often of a fundamental nature. One example is the case law that obliges administrations and/or courts to seek expert advice and the procedural safeguards that should go hand in hand with this. Another example is the question of whether unlawfully obtained evidence should be excluded from further consideration by the administration and (later on) by the domestic courts. With the ever more frequent use by administrations of technologies that are subject to strict regulation in order to safeguard fundamental rights such as respect for private life, the risk of evidence being unlawfully obtained increases. Given the link with fundamental rights, the development of a European approach was thus to be expected, even though both courts do not seem to be entirely on the same page on the criteria to be applied in this respect.

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