Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?

Today, an ombudsman is a traditional component of democratic legal systems. Generally, reports of the ombudsman are not legally binding. Due to this fact, the ombudsman can rely only on his own persuasiveness, on his acceptance by individuals and state institutions, on the understanding of the admin...

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Main Author: Milan Remac
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University School of Law 2013-07-01
Series:Utrecht Law Review
Subjects:
law
Online Access:http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.237/
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spelling doaj-1d45d8e070a143cbb864af64b03159452020-11-25T03:38:41ZengUtrecht University School of LawUtrecht Law Review1871-515X2013-07-0193627810.18352/ulr.237228Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?Milan Remac0Utrecht University School of LawToday, an ombudsman is a traditional component of democratic legal systems. Generally, reports of the ombudsman are not legally binding. Due to this fact, the ombudsman can rely only on his own persuasiveness, on his acceptance by individuals and state institutions, on the understanding of the administration and on the accessibility and transparency of rules that underpin his reports. During investigations, ombudsmen assess whether the administration has acted in accordance with certain legal or extra-legal standards. Depending on the legal system, ombudsmen can investigate whether there is an instance of maladministration in the activities of administrative bodies, whether the administration has acted ‘properly’, whether it has acted in accordance with the law, whether administrative actions have breached the human rights of complainants or whether the actions of the administration were in accordance with anti-corruption rules etc. Regardless of the legislative standard of an ombudsman’s control, the ombudsman should consider and assess the situation described in complaints against certain criteria or against certain normative standards. A distinct set of standards which ombudsmen use during their investigation, or at least a clear statement of their assessment criteria, can increase the transparency of their procedures and the persuasiveness of their reports. Are the normative standards used by different ombudsmen the same? Do they possibly create a new normative concept? And can it possibly lead to a higher acceptance of their reports by the administration?http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.237/ombudsmannormative standardslawgood administrationhuman rightsdevelopment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Milan Remac
spellingShingle Milan Remac
Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?
Utrecht Law Review
ombudsman
normative standards
law
good administration
human rights
development
author_facet Milan Remac
author_sort Milan Remac
title Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?
title_short Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?
title_full Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?
title_fullStr Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?
title_full_unstemmed Standards of Ombudsman Assessment: A New Normative Concept?
title_sort standards of ombudsman assessment: a new normative concept?
publisher Utrecht University School of Law
series Utrecht Law Review
issn 1871-515X
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Today, an ombudsman is a traditional component of democratic legal systems. Generally, reports of the ombudsman are not legally binding. Due to this fact, the ombudsman can rely only on his own persuasiveness, on his acceptance by individuals and state institutions, on the understanding of the administration and on the accessibility and transparency of rules that underpin his reports. During investigations, ombudsmen assess whether the administration has acted in accordance with certain legal or extra-legal standards. Depending on the legal system, ombudsmen can investigate whether there is an instance of maladministration in the activities of administrative bodies, whether the administration has acted ‘properly’, whether it has acted in accordance with the law, whether administrative actions have breached the human rights of complainants or whether the actions of the administration were in accordance with anti-corruption rules etc. Regardless of the legislative standard of an ombudsman’s control, the ombudsman should consider and assess the situation described in complaints against certain criteria or against certain normative standards. A distinct set of standards which ombudsmen use during their investigation, or at least a clear statement of their assessment criteria, can increase the transparency of their procedures and the persuasiveness of their reports. Are the normative standards used by different ombudsmen the same? Do they possibly create a new normative concept? And can it possibly lead to a higher acceptance of their reports by the administration?
topic ombudsman
normative standards
law
good administration
human rights
development
url http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.237/
work_keys_str_mv AT milanremac standardsofombudsmanassessmentanewnormativeconcept
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