The Appeal of Internal Review
Law, Administrative Justice and the (non-) Emergence of Disputes| By: | David Cowan; Simon Halliday |
| Publisher: | Bloomsbury UK |
| Print ISBN: | 9781841133836 |
| eText ISBN: | 9781847312389 |
| Edition: | 1 |
| Copyright: | 2003 |
| Format: | Page Fidelity |
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Why do most welfare applicants fail to challenge adverse decisions despite a continuing sense of need?
The book addresses this severely under-researched and under-theorised question. Using English homelessness law as their case study,the authors explore why homeless applicants did -- but more often did not -- challenge adverse decisions by seeking internal administrative review. They draw out from their data a list of the barriers to the take up of grievance rights. Further, by combining extensive interview data from aggrieved homeless applicants with ethnographic data about bureaucratic decision-making, they are able to situate these barriers within the dynamics of the citizen-bureaucracy relationship. Additionally, they point to other contexts which inform applicants' decisions about whether to request an internal review. Drawing on a diverse literature -- risk, trust, audit, legal consciousness, and complaints -- the authors lay the foundations for our understanding of the (non-)emergence of administrative disputes.