TY - JOUR
T1 - Rethinking the Public-Private Law Divide in the Age of Governmentality and Network Governance
T2 - An Analysis of French, English and Dutch Administrative Law
AU - van den Berge, L.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - This article presents an analysis of the ways in which the public-private law divide is envisioned in French, English and Dutch law. First, it explains why French law’s tradition of regarding public and private law as ‘two separated worlds’ is now outmoded, failing to live up to the present trends of ‘governmentality’ and ‘network governance’ determining the modern art of government. Subsequently, it argues that the holistic idea of English common law as French law’s conceptual counterpart is equally outmoded, with its ideology of ‘self-government’ within a ‘stateless society’ being out of touch with an age of managerialism and ‘governmentality’ in which the state withdraws from society only to increase its grip on societal processes. Finally, it proposes a paradigm recently developed in Dutch doctrinal thought as an attractive theoretical framework for structural innovations that may contribute to a stable and legitimate system of modern European public law that attunes to its present context without being alienated from its central classical tenets – be it either those rooted in the French or the English tradition.
AB - This article presents an analysis of the ways in which the public-private law divide is envisioned in French, English and Dutch law. First, it explains why French law’s tradition of regarding public and private law as ‘two separated worlds’ is now outmoded, failing to live up to the present trends of ‘governmentality’ and ‘network governance’ determining the modern art of government. Subsequently, it argues that the holistic idea of English common law as French law’s conceptual counterpart is equally outmoded, with its ideology of ‘self-government’ within a ‘stateless society’ being out of touch with an age of managerialism and ‘governmentality’ in which the state withdraws from society only to increase its grip on societal processes. Finally, it proposes a paradigm recently developed in Dutch doctrinal thought as an attractive theoretical framework for structural innovations that may contribute to a stable and legitimate system of modern European public law that attunes to its present context without being alienated from its central classical tenets – be it either those rooted in the French or the English tradition.
KW - public-private divide
KW - public law
KW - legal theory
KW - comparative administrative law
KW - governance
KW - neoliberalism
UR - https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3094301
U2 - 10.1163/22134514-00502002
DO - 10.1163/22134514-00502002
M3 - Article
SN - 2213-4514
VL - 5
SP - 119
EP - 143
JO - European Journal of Comparative Law and Governance
JF - European Journal of Comparative Law and Governance
IS - 2
ER -