This Administrative Law book offers an integrated and practice-oriented exploration of the law governing public power and administrative action. It begins with foundational concepts — sources of administrative authority, separation of powers, and constitutional constraints — then moves to delegated legislation, administrative discretion, and the procedural safeguards of natural justice. Detailed chapters on judicial review explain grounds (illegality, irrationality, procedural impropriety), standard of review, remedies (certiorari, prohibition, mandamus, habeas corpus, and injunctions), and remedies in public law. The volume also covers contemporary tribunal design and procedures, administrative adjudication, ombudsman systems, and regulatory enforcement. Each topic pairs doctrinal exposition with succinct summaries of leading cases, practice notes, specimen petitions, and checklists for hearings and appeals. Special sections discuss administrative transparency, accountability mechanisms, and recent trends in administrative reform. Structured for fast reference, the book includes an indexed table of cases and statutes, making it useful for classroom study, courtroom preparation, government officers, and policy practitioners. Whether preparing litigation, advising clients, or studying public law, readers gain a clear roadmap from principle to practice.






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