DEMOCRACY IN AN AGE OF HYPER-LEGISLATION

In recent decades, successive Parliaments in Australia and elsewhere have proliferated an extraordinary amount of legislation. Notable features of this phenomenon are the complexity of these statutes and the breadth of discretionary powers bestowed on the executive government with a concomitant deleterious impact on fundamental rights. This panel explores various problems that arise from this...

Panel 24, MONDAY 25 June 2018 16:45-18:15

ADMINISTRATIVE DEMOCRACY

The Panel is concerned with various features of administrative democracy. In particular, speakers will deal with the following themes: participation in adjudication procedures; participation in rulemaking; transparency and access to administrative information; intensity of judicial review of administrative action; reforms of public administration.

Panel 19, MONDAY 25 June 2018 16:45-18:15

REFUGEE PROTECTION AT THE BORDERS OF INTERNATIONAL REFUGEE LAW: LEGAL RESPONSES, EXCEPTIONS, AND POSSIBILITIES

Discourse surrounding refugee protection in the Asian context often presumes the absence of relevant legal norms since most states in the region have not acceded to the 1951 Convention related to the status of refugees. Given continuing resistance to accession, some claim that Asia has essentially “rejected“ refugee law. Others suggest that states have nevertheless...

Panel 7, MONDAY 25 June 2018 16:45-18:15

REGIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS COURTS: PROTECTORS OF HUMAN RIGHTS, OR OF NATIONAL AND REGIONAL IDENTITIES – OR BOTH?

Regional human rights systems are between Scylla and Charybdis: On the one hand they should uphold the states‘ human rights treaty obligations. On the other hand, they should arguably show appropriate respect for value pluralism, for various expressions of the majority‘s conception of national identity, and regionally shared modes of ‘balancing‘ rights and other important...

Panel 22, MONDAY 25 June 2018 16:45-18:15