Affiliation:
1. full professor of Administrative Law, Faculty of Law, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic & Visiting Fellow, European Law and Governance School, Athens, Hellenic Republic
Abstract
Traditionally, the scholarship of administrative law has paid only very limited
attention to the phaenomenon of extraterritoriality. Hereby, the scholarship has reflected the
theoretical considerations concerning the sovereignty of the State, which have implied that
administrative authorities execute their functions exclusively in the territory of the State. At
the same time, the scholarship of international public law has traditionally acknowledged
that – as based on a corresponding international agreement – a State may allow the
administrative authorities of a foreign State to execute certain functions in its own territory.
This article aims to reconcile these two approaches, demonstrating that the phaenomenon of
extraterritoriality has emerged to represent an integral part of the system of administrative
law in various jurisdictions. This article also argues that this perception of administrative
law actually fails to represent any new feature, but is based on traditional concepts existing
in the public law of Europe. Thus, extraterritoriality must be considered as a part of the ius
publicum europaeum commune.
Publisher
Bucharest University of Economic Studies
Subject
Law,Political Science and International Relations,Public Administration,Education
Cited by
2 articles.
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