A case study on the appeal suit between the administrative entities or their administrative agencies (including national universities) - Focused on the ability of a party, plaintiffs’ eligibility and disposability -

2019 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 99-154
Author(s):  
IL-SE LEE
2020 ◽  
pp. 009539972095314
Author(s):  
Hongwung Wang ◽  
Yi-Ching Tsai

This study examines the blame avoidance (BA) strategies that may be adopted after policy failures of multiple agencies. A classification of agencies is proposed based on two factors: the amount of actual responsibility that an agency is obliged for, and the extent of an agency’s perceived responsibility. Agencies can thus be classified into four types, which may have different tactical goals and specific BA strategies that contradict other agencies’ goals, thereby leading to a complicated interaction between them. The results show that one of the three related agencies do not adopt suggested BA strategy and therefore fails to avoid blame.


2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward H. Stiglitz

AbstractInequality is the defining feature of our times. Many argue that it calls for a policy response, yet the most obvious policy responses require legislative action. And if inequality is the defining feature of our times, partisan acrimony and gridlock are the defining features of the legislature. That being so, it is worth considering what role administrative agencies, and administrative law, might play in ameliorating or exacerbating economic inequality. Here, I focus on American safety net programs, many of which are joint operations between federal administrative agencies and state governments. In this context, a central mode of bureaucratic policy innovation comes in the form of administrative waivers, whereby a federal administrative agency waives some statutory requirement that is otherwise binding on state administrators. For example, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently granted waivers to allow several states to impose various “personal responsibility” requirements on Medicaid beneficiaries.Faced with a choice between legislative inactivity and policy innovation through waivers, many scholars and policymakers of both parties have tended to favor waivers. The appeal of waivers as a path around legislative gridlock is compelling. However, I argue that this view has neglected the federal structure of American safety net programs, and does not account for the state politics of implementation. Moreover, scholars have not focused on the severe information problems that federal agencies face when issuing waivers; a permissive waiver regime exacerbates these problems. Focusing on Medicaid implementation, I highlight the risks of waivers for American safety net programs. Before concluding, I discuss possible reforms to administrative procedures, and offer a case study of litigation surrounding one recent waiver application. The case study illustrates many of the theoretical arguments, and further demonstrates the failure of judicial review; it indicates how review might be adjusted to promote more effective use of waivers and diminish their perils.


Author(s):  
Yuta Kikuchi

AbstractThis study quantitatively estimates the impacts of the partial privatization of Japanese national universities (as implemented in 2004) on research performance outcomes, which are aggregated and disaggregated across research fields. Japanese private universities can be viewed as counterfactuals not targeted by the reform for the same period, which provides within-country variations in this governance/managerial change. Difference-in-differences estimation strategies using private universities as control groups show that the partial privatization of national universities has resulted in a deterioration in the quality and quantity of national universities’ research output, as constructed using publication records from 1999 to 2009. The study then estimates the effects of partial privatization disaggregated by research field and finds that only medical science is negatively affected by the partial privatization. This study is the first to provide a quantitative assessment of whether the partial privatization of Japanese universities has been favorable for research performance using an identification strategy based on a quasi-experiment. It also reveals the heterogeneous impacts across research fields and departments.


1970 ◽  
Vol 15 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 28-42
Author(s):  
Maryam Dar

The present study was conducted to explore the need for ESP courses in Pakistani universities. The present study scrutinizes the target needs of the students of Advanced English Language Diploma of National Universities of Modern Languages who join the Language Course for occupational purposes. The sample for the study consisted of 40 students, 5 teachers and 5 alumni. The needs, lacks, wants, expectations, preferred style of learning, interest and satisfaction level of students were determined with the help of Needs Analysis using questionnaires, interviews and observation tools. The results indicate low interest and satisfaction level of the students due to the general nature of the Diploma course. This calls for the separate ESP courses for the students who join the English Diploma courses for occupational reasons.Key words: Needs analysis; English for specific purposes; General to specific; NUML; ESP in PakistanJournal of NELTA Vol. 15 No. 1-2 December 2010Page: 28-42Uploaded date: 4 May, 2011DOI: 10.3126/nelta.v15i1-2.4607


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward H. Stiglitz

18 Theoretical Inquiries in Law (2017)Inequality is the defining feature of our times. Many argue it calls for a policy response, yet the most obvious policy responses require legislative action. And if inequality is the defining feature of our times, partisan acrimony and gridlock are the defining features of the legislature. So being, it is worth considering what role administrative agencies, and administrative law, might play in ameliorating or exacerbating economic inequality. Here, I focus on American safety net programs, many of which are joint operations between federal administrative agencies and state governments. In this context, a central mode of bureaucratic policy innovation comes in the form of administrative waivers, whereby a federal administrative agency waives some statutory requirement that otherwise binds on state administrators. For example, the CMS recently granted waivers to allow several states to impose various “personal responsibility” requirements on Medicaid beneficiaries.Faced with a choice between legislative inactivity and policy innovation through waivers, many scholars and policymakers of both parties have tended to favor waivers. The appeal of waivers as a path around legislative gridlock is compelling. However, I argue that this view has neglected the federal structure of American safety net programs, and does not account for the state politics of implementation. Moreover, scholars have not focused on the severe information problems that federal agencies face when issuing waivers; a permissive waiver regime exacerbates these problems. Focusing on Medicaid implementation, I highlight the risks of waivers for American safety net programs. Before concluding, I discuss possible reforms to administrative procedures, and offer a case study of litigation surrounding one recent waiver application. The case study illustrates many of the theoretical arguments, and further demonstrates the failure of judicial review; it indicates how review might be adjusted to promote more effective use of waivers and diminish their perils.


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