In the various European countries, debates on the ransformation of administrative law are held from a national perspective and with different intensity. Given the considerable effects such discussion may have on the methods of administrative legal scholarship, an analysis of these developments in a European context promises valuable results.
For this purpose, a long term transnational exchange of ideas between administrative law scholars from England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Sweden has been initiated in 2005 in Dornburg castle and continued with meetings in London (2007) and Paris (2009).
This volume comprises the results of the fourth workshop of the Dornburg Research Group of New Administrative Law that took place in Dornburg in May 2012. The group scrutinized the relationship between national traditions and the evolution of common principles of European administrative law. It discussed, to what extend theoretical, dogmatic, political or historical national traditions prevent or enable the development of a European administrative law.