Abstract

The Hellenic Court of Audit, established in 1833, constitutes the oldest institution of administrative law in the history of the modern Greek state, as it plays a significant role in financial management through the audit of public finances and the monitoring of the state’s revenues and expenditures. The object of the present study is to analyse all the important issues of the Court, such as its structure and organisation, its dual legal nature as a supreme ordinary public court and as a supreme administrative authority, but also its competences, judicial or not, and the legal remedies or means of redress exercised before the Court.

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