Tagore Law Lectures  1918. Comparative Administrative Law With Special Reference to the Organisation and Legal Position of the Administrative Authorities in British India

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Tagore Law Lectures 1918. Comparative Administrative Law With Special Reference to the Organisation and Legal Position of the Administrative Authorities in British India

1919

The third event is the passing through the Legislative Council of the Governor General of India of the first of the two Rowlatt Bills for a term of three years from the expiry of the present Defence of India Act some emergency provisions whereof the new enacment virtually incorporates in the Statute-book of India on a more pemanent footing than that Act. [...] pop 113-114 Charter Act of 1833—Equality of Indian and British subjects before the law and assimilation of Mofussil and Presidency administrations—First separate legislature of India—Its jurisdiction--Position in 1833 114.116 Government of India Act of 1858—Assumption of Government by the Crown : its meaning—The Secretary d State for India—His Council—Powers of the Secretary of State statutory b [...] tion by public prosecutors—Difference in the relation of officials and the law in England and on the Continent— An illustration—State of siege" in France unknown to English law—Legal position of civil and military officers participating in the suppression of riots in England--Its implications—"State of war" and the legal position of the military authorities in relation thereto 469.476 Power of G [...] Organisation of administrative courts in France-- Special and general courts—Councils of Prefecture— Council of State—Constitution and powers of the Councils of Prefecture—Organisation of the Council of State—Its original appellate and special jurisdiction German administrative courts--Extent and limits of their jurisdiction—Imperial administrative courts—Prussian administrative courts—Extent and [...] Goodnow's condemnation of the system of control by committees and interpellations—Hifferent conditions in England—Cabinet the guide and not the servant of the legislature--Is the English cabinet growing autocratic ?- The Indian legislatures have no control over the policy of the executive—Power of interpellation in India—As execised between 1853 and 1861—Power of interpellation given by later s
law
Pages
746
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.145196
Segment Pages Author Actions
Preface
i-xliv Nagendranath Ghose view
Book I. Analytical & Historical
1-154 Nagendranath Ghose view
Book II. Substantive Administrative Law
155-584 Nagendranath Ghose view
Book III. Adjective Administrative Law
585-680 Nagendranath Ghose view
Index
681-696 Nagendranath Ghose view

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