Abstract

This article deals with the challenges concerning increasing administrative justice efficacy in Russia and other BRICS countries, where the specialized development of jurisdictional bodies is inconsistent and far from effective. The article analyzes the gaps and disputed aspects of administrative justice including the mechanisms for judicial administrative dispute resolution in the BRICS countries. The authors argue that the level of effectiveness of administrative justice vested in judicial procedures depends critically on the specialization of the administrative courts. This involves individual judges, separately operating permanent judges, judicial committees, mono-courts, independent administrative judicial systems incorporated into larger judicial systems within the courts of general jurisdiction, and separate and independent administrative and judicial systems. Even though the BRICS countries do not have a structured administrative judiciary, the retrospective and comparative analysis of their administrative justice jurisdiction and its most effective practices and mechanisms undertaken by the authors enables them to rethink the existing approach to resolving administrative cases via the judiciary. The aim of the article is to initiate the creation of an independent administrative court system organization in order to ensure better justice in the areas of social life including legal relations with executive bodies. Suggestions for the implementation of the specialization of the administrative judiciary in the Russian Federation are given. The authors, for the first time in Russian jurisprudence, propose a theoretical model of an independent, four-tiered specialized legal mechanism of administrative justice, which includes the interrelated factors of court organization, the judiciary and their legal status. The range of the four specialized tiers of the administrative judicial system is proposed. It is argued that they should include a systematic succession represented by lower courts, first instance lower courts, area courts and a Higher Administrative Court of the Russian Federation.

Highlights

  • This article deals with the challenges concerning increasing administrative justice efficacy in Russia and other BRICS countries, where the specialized development of jurisdictional bodies is inconsistent and far from effective

  • The authors argue that the level of effectiveness of administrative justice vested in judicial procedures depends critically on the specialization of the administrative courts

  • Elimination of the imperfections discussed in these pages, as well as overcoming inconsistencies in the Administrative Justice Code of the Russian Federation to codified legislation, will undoubtedly increase the efficacy and excellence of the administrative justice mechanism and lead to the improvement of relevant judicial practice

Read more

Summary

History of Administrative Justice Development in Russia

Russian administrative justice issues and their development are rather thematically broad. Административная юстиция России: историко-правовой аспект // Проблемы защиты публичных и частных интересов в административных судах: Материалы конференции [Alexander B. The legal literature of the Soviet period considered the powers of a number of state bodies – the People’s Commissariat of State Control, the Workers’ and Peasants’ Inspection, the Chief Disciplinary Court of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee (1920s) – and some scholarly research on administrative justice was carried out.. The legal literature of the Soviet period considered the powers of a number of state bodies – the People’s Commissariat of State Control, the Workers’ and Peasants’ Inspection, the Chief Disciplinary Court of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee (1920s) – and some scholarly research on administrative justice was carried out.21 These bodies should be referred to as pre-judicial, extrajudicial, quasi-judicial and even pseudo-judicial administrative bodies. Starilov (ed.), Voronezh: Publishing House of the Voronezh State University, 2013)

Assessment of the Effectiveness of Current Procedural Legislation in Russia
Integrity of the Existing Terms “Administrative Wrongdoing” and “Crime”
Shortcomings of Modern Administrative Procedural Law
Conclusion
40 Euro-American Model Code of Administrative Jurisdiction
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call