Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
This contribution will contain an analysis of important European dynamics, particularly at this moment when it seems to be necessary to restart the process of a unified European identity, which was, in a way, compromised after the failure of the EU Constitution and the difficulty of giving effectiveness to democracy:
the EC professes democracy without being democratic. Thus the fragility of its political institutions, inherently perilous, necessarily reflects on the legitimacy of its legal order, while the constitutional balance intrinsic to the separation of powers ideal is dangerously absent. In other words, while in every Member State, the administrative law system forms part of a working system, this is not the case in the Community.
1 The Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe (TCE), commonly referred to as the European Constitution, is an international Treaty intended to create a constitution for the European Union. Despite its name, it only covers the European Union. It was signed in 2004 by representatives of the Member States of the Union but was subject to ratification by all member states which has, to date, proved impossible to obtain. The constitutional treaty was signed by representatives of the Member States on October 29, 2004 and was in the process of ratification by the Member States until 2005 when French (May 29) and Dutch (June 1) voters rejected the Treaty in referenda. Had it been ratified, the Treaty would have been entered into force on November 1, 2006, but this is now impossible.Google Scholar
2 For an analytical examination of the democratic deficit in Europe, see BEACH, D., THE DYNAMIC OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION: WHY AND WHEN EU INSTITUTIONS MATTER (2005). In particular, see page 258.Google Scholar
3 Harlow, C., European Administrative Law and the Global Challenge, in THE EVOLUTION OF EU LAW 266 (P. Craig & G. de Burca eds., 1999).Google Scholar
4 Burca, G. de, Reappraising Subsidiarity's Significance after Amsterdam, HARVARD JEAN MONNET WORKING PAPER, 7/99, (2000).Google Scholar
5 Id.Google Scholar
6 Article 3b: “The Community shall act within the limits of the powers conferred upon it by this Treaty and of the objectives assigned to it therein. In areas which do not fall within its exclusive competence, the Community shall take action, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity, only if and in so far as the objectives of the proposed action cannot be sufficiently achieved by the Member States and can therefore, by reason of the scale or effects of the proposed action, be better achieved by the Community. Any action by the Community shall not go beyond what is necessary to achieve the objectives of this Treaty.”Google Scholar
7 Macrory, R. and Turner, S., Participatory Rights, Transboundary Environmental Governance and EC Law, 39 COMMON MARKET LAW REVIEW (C.M.L. REV.) 489 (2002). See also Cooper, I., The Watchdogs of Subsidiarity: National Parliaments and the Logic of Arguing in the EU, 44 JOURNAL OF COMMON MARKET STUDIES 281 (2006).Google Scholar
8 Toth, A. G., The Principle of Subsidiarity in the Maastricht Treaty, 29 C.M.L. REV. 239 (1992). For recent writings on subsidiarity, see Barber, N. W., Subsidiarity in the Draft Constitution, 11 EUROPEAN PUBLIC LAW 197 (2005), and Barber, N.W., The limited modesty of Subsidiarity, 11 EUROPEAN LAW JOURNAL 308 (2005). The principle can be found then in canon law: see Dashwood, A., The Relationship Between the Member States and the European Union/European Community, 41 C.M.L. REV. 366 (2004).Google Scholar
9 For this aspect see, more properly, note 4.Google Scholar
10 Art. 1, European Constitution.Google Scholar
11. Protocol on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality, 16 December 2004, Official Journal of the European Union, C310/207, available at www.eur-lex.europa.eu.Google Scholar
12 Art. 4, European Constitution.Google Scholar
13 Art. 5, European ConstitutionGoogle Scholar
14 See A. Peters, European Democracy after the 2003 Constitution, 41 C.M.L. REV. 37, 61 (2004).Google Scholar
15 Art. 7, European Constitution.Google Scholar
16 Art. 8, European Constitution.Google Scholar
17 Cooper, supra note 7.Google Scholar
18 Id. at 279.Google Scholar
19 Cooper, , supra note 7.Google Scholar
20 HARTLEY, T. C., CONSTITUTIONAL PROBLEMS OF THE EUROPEAN UNION 21 (1999), explaining this has been pointed out by a number of writers, for example Dashwood, A., States in the European Union, 23 EUROPEAN LAW REVIEW 201 (1998).Google Scholar
21 Dashwood, , supra note 8 at 368.Google Scholar
22 ECJ, C., Grand Chamber, 12 July 2005, Joined Cases C-154/04 and C-155/04, para. 101.Google Scholar
23 Id., para. 103. The leading case is Case C-491/01, Queen v. Secretary of States for Health (ex parte British American Tobacco [Investments] Ltd and Imperial Tobacco Ltd.), 2002 E.C.R. I-11453. See, moreover, Fiumara, O., La nuova normativa comunitaria sulla lavorazione, presentazione e vendita dei prodotti del tabacco (direttiva 2001/37/CE), RASSEGNA DELL'AVVOCATURA DELLO STATO 34 (2002); Selmayr, M., Kamann, H.G. & Ahlers, S., Die Binnenmarktkompetenz der Europäischen Gemeinschaft, EUROPÄISCHES WIRTSCHAFTS UND STEUERRECHT (E.W.S.) 49 (2003). For a complete framework concerning the proportionality principle in foodstuff matters, see also Spagnuolo, F., Il principio di proporzionalitä come parametro di legittimitä nelle sentenze della Corte di Giustizia sulle normative nazionali relative alla circolazione delle merci e alla tutela dei consumatori, RIVISTA IT. DIR. PUBBLICO COM 1544 (2003).Google Scholar
24 ECJ, C., Grand Chamber, 12 July 2005, Joined Cases C-154/04 and C-155/04, para. 106.Google Scholar
25 The case law addressing the proportionality principle and its interactions with the precautionary principle is copious. For a detailed comment on it, see Lenaerts, K., “In the Union we trust”: Trust-Enhancing Principles of Community Law, 41 C.M.L. Rev. 317 (2004), which cites Case-180/96, United Kingdom v. Commission, 1998 E.C.R. 1-2265; Case C-352/98, P. Laboratoires pharmaceutiques Bergaderm v. Commission, 2000 E.C.R. I-5291; Case C-3/00, Denmark v. Commission, 2003 E.C.R. I-2643. See also Dabrowska, P., GM Foods, Risk, Precaution and Internal Market: Did Both Sides Win the Day in the Recent Judgement of European Court of Justice? 5 German Law Journal 151 (2004), available at www.germanlawjournal.com/article.php?id=383.Google Scholar
26 In 2005 E.C.R.I-1135, paras. 93-95.Google Scholar
27 Ex multis, Judgment of the Court of 13 May 1997, Case C-233/94, Federal Republic of Germany v. European Parliament and Council of the European Union, 1997 E.C.R. I-012405. See the case note of Dreher, M. and Newmann, K., ENTSCHEIDUNGEN ZUM WIRTSCHAFTSRECHT 159 (1997).Google Scholar
28 Koopmans, T., Subsidiarity, Politics and the Judiciary, 1 EUROPEAN CONSTITUTIONAL LAW REVIEW 115 (2005).Google Scholar
29 See Galetta, D. U. and Kröger, D., Giustiziabilitä del principio di sussidiarietä nell'ordinamento costituzionale tedesco e concetto di “necessarietä” ai sensi del principio di proporzionalitä tedesco e comunitario, RIV. ITAL. DIR. PUBBLICO COM. 928 (1998). See also CARANTA, R., GIUSTIZIA AMMINISTRATIVA E DIRITTO COMUNITARIO 142 (1992).Google Scholar
30 See Amato, G., The European Convention: First Achievements and Open Dilemmas, 1 INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 361 (2003).Google Scholar
31 See, for instance, Risse, T., Neofunctionalism, European Identity, and the Puzzles of European Integration, JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY 291 (2005). See also HAAS, E. B., THE UNITING OF EUROPE: POLITICAL, SOCIAL, AND ECONOMIC FORCES 1950-1957 (1958). For more, see also Börzel, T. A., Mind the Gap! European Integration Between Level and Scope, JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY 217 (2005).Google Scholar
32 P. CRAIG & G. DE BÜRCA (eds.), THE EVOLUTION OF EU LAW 50 (1999). See also, S. ANDERSEN & K. ELIASSEN (eds.), THE EUROPEAN UNION: HOW DEMOCRATIC IS IT? (1996); J. BUCHANAN, THE LIMITS OF LIBERTY: BETWEEN ANARCHY AND LEVIATHAN (1975); P. CRAIG & C. HARLOW, LAWMAKING IN THE EUROPEAN UNION (1998).Google Scholar
33 I. KANT, ZUM EWIGEN FRIEDEN: EIN PHILOSOPHISCHER ENTWURF (1795). See also GERHARDT, V., IMMANUEL KANTS ENTWURF “ZUM EWIGEN FRIEDEN,” EINE TEORIE DER POLITIK (1995). With respect to the influence of Kant's conception of Perpetual Peace and Habermas theories, see R. Alexy, Basic Rights and Democracy in Habermas's Procedural Paradigm of the Law, 2 RATIO JURIS (1994); Bobbio, N., Scienza del diritto ed analisi del linguaggio (1950), in DIRITTO E ANALISI DEL LINGUAGGIO (U. Scarpelli, ed., 1976).Google Scholar
34 For more details, see Craig, P., The Nature of the Community: Integration, Democracy, and Legitimacy, in THE EVOLUTION OF EU LAW (P. Craig & G. De Bürca eds., 1999).Google Scholar
35 SLAUGHTER, A. M., A NEW WORLD ORDER 40, 43 (2004). See also Chiti, E., The Emergence of a Community Administration, C.M.L. REV. 329 (2000).Google Scholar
36 The multiplicity of meanings hidden behind the Net-metaphor can be used it as an instrument to disclose the best way to assess the effectiveness of the legal system. Möllers, C., Netzwerk als Kategorie des Organisationsrechts, in DEZENTRALE NICHT-NORMATIVE STEUERUNG (J. Oebbecke ed., 2005); see also R. WOLFRUM, VORBEITENDE WILLENSBILDUNG UND ENTSCHEIDUNGSPROZEß BEIM ABSCHLUß MULTILATERAL VÖLKERRECHTLICHER VERTRÄGE (2001).Google Scholar
37 Börzel, T., Policy Networks – A New Paradigm of European Governance?, EUI WORKING PAPERS, RSC 97/19 5 (1997); Chiti, , supra note 28 at 339; Waarden, F. Van, European Harmonization of National Regulatory Styles?, in COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMENT OF EUROPEAN COMMUNITY LAW, 95 (J.A.E. Vervaele, et. al. eds., 1999).Google Scholar
38 Chiti, , supra note 28 at 329. See also Majone, G., The New European Agencies: Regulation By Information, 42 JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY 262 (1997); Hanf, K. & O'Toole, L. J., Revisiting Old Friends: Networks, Implementation Structures and the Management of Inter-organizational Relations, 21 (1/2) EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL RESEARCH 163 (1992); G. Jordan & K. Schubert, (eds.), Policy networks, 21 (1/2) European Journal of Political Research 187 (1992).Google Scholar
39 Blom-Hansen, J., A “New Institutional” Perspective on Policy Networks, 75 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION 669 (1997), according to which: “defining policy networks seems to be a never-ending story.“Google Scholar
40 Möllers, , supra note 36, at 387.Google Scholar
41 See HABERMAS, J., DISCOURSE ETHICS: NOTES ON A PROGRAM OF PHILOSOPHICAL JUSTIFICATION 65 (1990). The essential implications of this theory can be summarized as follows: equal participation of all who are affected; the postulate of unlimitedness, i.e. the fundamental unboundedness and openness concerning time and persons; the postulate of freedom from constraint (Zwangslosigkeit), i.e., the freedom, in principle, of discourse from accidental and structural forms of power; and the postulate of seriousness or authenticity (Ernsthaftigkeit), i.e., the absence of deception and even illusion in expressing intentions and in performing speech acts.Google Scholar
42 J. HABERMAS, BETWEEN FACTS AND NORMS: CONTRIBUTIONS TO A DISCOURSE THEORY OF LAW AND DEMOCRACY 111 (1998).Google Scholar
43 Baxter, H., Habermas's Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy, 50 BUFFALO LAW REVIEW 266 (2002). The terms “jurisgenesis” and “jurisgenerative,” he notes, are most closely associated with the work of Robert Cover. See Cover, R. M., Nomos and Narrative, 97 HARVARD LAW REVIEW 4, 11, 25, (1983).Google Scholar
44 For Habermas's conception of civil society as a network of voluntary associations, see Habermas supra note 42, at 175, 358, 359 and 367.Google Scholar
45 HABERMAS, , supra note 42, at 169.Google Scholar
46 Habermas, J., In the Pragmatic, Ethical, and Moral Employments of Practical Reason, in JUSTIFICATION AND APPLICATION: REMARKS ON DISCOURSE ETHICS 50 (C. P. Cronin, trans., 1993).Google Scholar
47 It is worth to noting, however, that the network model has had good results in cooperation between competition authorities. See Roebling, S., Ryan, T. & Sjöblom, L., The International Competition Network (ICN) Two Years On: Concrete Results of a Virtual Network, 3 Competition Policy Newsletter 37 (2003).Google Scholar
48 Laming, R., An Introduction to Dederalism, 1 Federal Union (2003), available at www.federalunion.org.uk.Google Scholar
49 Fastenrath, U., The EU As a Federal Commonwealth, in GOVERNING EUROPE UNDER A CONSTITUTION 414 (H. J. Blanke & S. Mangiameli eds., 2006); Kwiecień, R., The Primacy of European Union Law over National Law under the Constitutional Treaty, 6 German Law Journal: Special Issue –Unity of the European Constitution 11 (2005).Google Scholar
50 For an extensive bibliography on German public and administrative reforms, see Stern, K., Der moderne Staat: Aufgaben, Grenzen und reformgedanken, TEORIA DEL DIRITTO E DELLO STATO: Rivista europea di cultura e scienza giuridica 216 (2002).Google Scholar
51 For this and a further bibliography, see Groppi, T. & Scattone, N., Italy: the Subsidiarity Principle, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 131 (2006); Tubertini, C., Public Administration in the Light of the New Title V of the Italian Constitution, 12 EUROPEAN PUBLIC LAW 35 (2006).Google Scholar
52 For detailed descriptions of subsidiarity models, see M. NETTESHEIM & P. SCHIERA (eds.), DER INTEGRIERTE STAAT: VERFASSUNGS- UND EUROPARECHTLICHE BETRACHTUNGEN AUS ITALIENISCHER UND DEUTSCHER PERSPEKTIVE (1999).Google Scholar
53 Cassese, S., European Administrative Proceedings, 68 LAW AND CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS 21 (2004).Google Scholar
54 For an overview of the Federal Republic of Germany's roots, see Watts, L. and Hobson, P., Fiscal Federalism in Germany, Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada and Department of Economics, Acadia University, Wolvifille, Nova Scotia, Canada, 2000: “The Federal Republic of Germany established in 1949 has historical roots in earlier experience of the German Empire (1871-1918), the Weimar Republic (1919-34), the failure of the totalitarian centralization of the third Reich (1934-35), and the immediate postwar influence of the allied occupying powers. In 1949, the Länder of West Germany became the Federal Republic of Germany. Thirty one years later, the reunification of Germany in 1990 provided for the accession of five new Länder from had previously been the Democratic Republic of Germany.” One of the first authors, to recognize the importance of then new concept of federalism in the BundesStaat, even if he referred to a period antecedent to the Grundgesetz, was JELLINEK, G., ALLGEMEINE STAATSLEHRE (1929). On the conceptualization of sovereignty in Jellinek and also in the Kelsen studies see the recent work of Griller, S., The Impact of the Constitution for Europe on National Sovereignty, in A CONSTITUTION FOR EUROPE: THE IGC, THE RATIFICATION PROCESS AND BEYOND 160 (I. Pernice & J. Zemanek eds., 2005). For a detailed introduction to the Jellinek study, see ORLANDO, V. E., GIORGIO JELLINEK E LA STORIA DEL DIRITTO PUBBLICO GENERALE (1949). See also Meibom, H., Die Wirkung der Mitgliedstaaten in der Rechtsetzung der EWG, in ZUR STELLUNG DER MITGLIEDSTAATEN IM EUROPARECHT (H. Bülek ed., 1967); BIRKE, H. E., DIE DEUTSCHEN BUNDESLÄNDER IN DEN EUROPÄISCHEN GEMEINSCHAFTENM (1973).Google Scholar
55 With respect to the revision of the Constitution after the reunification of the two Germanies in 1990, see Gornig, G.H. & Reckewerth, S., The Revision of the German Basic Law: Current Perspectives and Problems in German Constitutional Law, PUBLIC LAW 137, 144 (1997), who observe on Article 23: “the new Article 23 B.L. deals extensively with the participation of German national and state organs in the affairs of the European Union. In the final analysis, it was the states (Länder) that played the predominant role in shaping the new provision, particularly the wording which makes German participation in European unification contingent upon the principles of federalism and subsidiarity and which offers to the states rights to participate directly, as a compensation for the loss of other state (Länder) powers.”Google Scholar
56 See, infra, Section G, III, the analysis of fiscal federalism.Google Scholar
57 On this aspect, see also Beckendorf, H., Neuere Entwicklungen in der Bildungspolitik der Europäischen Gemeinschaft, 2 NVwZ 125 (1993).Google Scholar
58 Salvatore, E. di, Integrazione europea e regionalismo: l'esempio tedesco, in Diritto Pubblico Comparato e Europeo 518 (2001), who notably recollects the Länder's keen desire for the subsidiarity principle even though their proposal was not precisely accepted and Art. 3 B had content different from what they really wanted, excluding de facto the role of Länder themselves.Google Scholar
59 On Art. 23 GG's amendment see Hölscheidt, S. & Schotten, T., Die Erweiterung der Europäischen Union als Anwendungsfall des neuen Europaartikels 23 GG?, 5 Die Öffentliche 187 (1995); Fischer, W., Die Europäischen Union im Grundgesetz: der Neue Artikel 23, ZParl. 32 (1993); Wilhelm, F., Europa im Grundgesetz: Der Neue Artikel 23, BayVBl 705 (1992).Google Scholar
60 Article 51, on “Composition,” outlines the effective make up of the Bundesrat. See Hillgruber, C., German Federalism – An Outdated Relict? 6 German Law Journal (2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
61 Streinz, R., Sub Art. 23 GG cit., 958; BVerGE 37, 271, 279. For an analysis of the judgment, see Frowein, J.A., Das Maastricht-Urteil und die Grenzen der Verfassungsgerichtsbarkeit, ZaöRV 1 (1994).Google Scholar
62 Nierhaus, M., Sub Art. 28, in GRUNDGESETZ KOMMENTAR 1040 (M. Sachs ed., 2003).Google Scholar
63 For further details, see Reichard, C., Local Public Management Reforms in Germany, 81 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION 345 (2003).Google Scholar
64 Id. at 347.Google Scholar
65 For further detail, see Nierhaus supra note 62 at 1061.Google Scholar
66 Huber, P. M., Sub Art. 31, in GRUNDGESETZ KOMMENTAR 1100 (M. Sachs ed., 2003).Google Scholar
67 Bauer, J. & Hartwig, M., Verträge der Länder des Bundesrepublik Deutschland mit ausländichen Staaten über Fragen der Kommunalen Zusammenarbeit, NWVBl 41 (1994). For further information, see also Streinz, R., Sub Art. 32, in GRUNDGESETZ KOMMENTAR 1111 (M. Sachs ed., 2003).Google Scholar
68 OSSENBÜHL, F., Föderalismus und Regionalismus in Europa. Landesbericht Bundesrepublik Deutschland, in ID., op. cit., 140; see also ERBGUTH, W., Sub Art. 35, in M. SACHS, (eds.) Grundgesetz Kommentar, cit., 1196.Google Scholar
69 Degenhart, C., Sub Art. 70 GG, in GRUNDGESETZ KOMMENTAR 1496 (M. Sachs ed., 2003).Google Scholar
70 Taylor, G., Germany: The Subsidiarity Principle, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 115 (2006). On Art. 72, see Buoso, E., L'art. 72, II comma GG davanti al Bundesverfassungsgericht, 5 LE REGIONI 959 (2003), which also provides an excellent bibliography.Google Scholar
71 Taylor, , supra note 70 at 116; Herdegen, M., After the TV Judgement of the German Constitutional Court: Decision-making Within the EU Council and the German Länder, C.M.L. REV 1369 (1995).Google Scholar
72 Woelk, L., La Germania. Il difficile equilibrio tra unitarietä, solidarietä e (maggiore) competizione, in FEDERALISMI FISCALI E COSTITUZIONI 191 (V. Atripaldi & R. Bifuclo eds., 2001).Google Scholar
73 On this subject, see Cartei, G. & Ferraro, V., Reform of the Fifth Title of Italian Constitution: a Step Towards a Federal System?, EUROPEAN PUBLIC LAW 445 (2002).Google Scholar
74 For a comparison between Italian devolution and German federalism, see Mangiameli, S., Continuitä e riforma della Costituzione, 2 TEORIA DEL DIRITTO E DELLO STATO, RIVISTA EUROPEA DI CULTURA E SCIENZA GIURIDICA 466-467 (2002).Google Scholar
75 Art. 117 (4). The Regions have exclusive legislative power with respect to any matters not expressly reserved to State law.”Google Scholar
76 In this regard, both the jurisprudence and secondary writings have pointed out that this first acceptance of subsidiarity has a double meaning. See Tubertini, , supra note 51 at 37; and also Bin, R., La funzione amministrativa nel nuovo Titolo V della Costituzione, LE REGIONI 373 (2002).Google Scholar
77 See Costituzionale, Corte, 1 October 2003, 6 RIV. CORTE CONTI 181 (2003).Google Scholar
78 Mangiameli, , supra note 74 at 478.Google Scholar
79 Transl.: From this point of view, the Italian system is not yet completely developed and the effectiveness of Art. 119 Const. is seriously discussed.Google Scholar
80 Bundesverwaltungsgericht [BVerwG] [Highest Administrative Court] 24 October 2002, II Sen., 24 available at www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/entscheidungen.html.Google Scholar
81 BVerfGE, 2, 213 ss; 10, 234; BVerGE, 15, 127; BVerfGE, 33, 224, 229, in www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/entscheidungen.html. For more information, see Buoso, E., L'art. 72, II comma, GG davanti al Bundesverfassungsgericht, LE REGIONI 958 (2003).Google Scholar
82 Taylor, , supra note 70.Google Scholar
83 Pestalozza, F., Sub Art. 72, Abs. 2, Rn. 1-47, in DAS BONNER GG- KOMMENTAR (H.V. Mangolt, F. Klein & F. Pestalozza eds., 2002).Google Scholar
84 Tansl.: Urgent provisions to solve the problem of coexistence between transgenic, conventional and biological cultures. For a detailed analysis of judicial review on the “Necessity-clause” see Galetta, and Kröger, , supra note 29.Google Scholar
85 In coordination with Law 28 January 2005, no. 5 in G.U. n. 22 of 28 January 2005.Google Scholar
86 See Commission Recommendation on 23 July 2003, available at www.europa.eu.Google Scholar
87 See Francescon, S., The New Directive 2001/18/EC on the Deliberate Release of Genetically Modified Organisms into the Environment: Changes and Perspectives, 10 RECIEL 309 (2001). See also M. Poto, I traguardi in tema di sicurezza alimentare tra ordinamento comunitario ed ordinamenti interni, in LA SICUREZZA ALIMENTARE TRA UNIONE EUROPEA, STATO E REGIONI DOPO LA RIFORMA DEL TITOLO V DELLA COSTITUZIONE (M. Poto, E. Rolando & C. Rossi eds., 2006).Google Scholar
88 See Corte cost., 26 luglio 2002, n. 407, in Giur. cost., 2002, 2940, with a note from Marini, F. S., La Corte costituzionale nel labirinto delle materie “trasversali.” Google Scholar
89 Both are available on the Constitutional Court's website at www.cortecostituzionale.it.Google Scholar
90 Fortsakis, T., Principles Governing Good Administration, 11 EUROPEAN PUBLIC LAW 207 (2005).Google Scholar
91 As compiled by Fortsakis, id. This list is quite similar to that collected by E. SPILIOTOPOULOS, GREEK ADMINISTRATIVE LAW para. 82 (2004).Google Scholar