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Administrative law examines the legality of acts, actions and decisions of public institutions and organizations, and regulates the procedures through which disputes arising between individuals and the administration are resolved. In areas where public power is exercised, the administration’s compliance with the law is important for the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms.
Administrative law deals with the activities of the state and other public legal entities, the conduct of public services and the legal relationships established by the administration with individuals. In this field, unilateral administrative acts, liabilities arising from public services, administrative sanctions, public personnel procedures and administrative lawsuits are evaluated together.
The availability of judicial remedies against the acts and actions of the administration is guaranteed within the framework of the Constitution and constitutes one of the fundamental bases of administrative law.
Administrative acts and administrative decisions
Annulment lawsuits
Full remedy actions
Public personnel procedures
Disciplinary penalties
Zoning, licensing and municipal procedures
Expropriation disputes
Administrative fines
Public procurement procedures
Requests for suspension of execution
Legality of the administration: This means that the administration must carry out all its acts based on statutory authority.
Public interest: This ensures that administrative activities are carried out by considering the general interest of society.
Principle of equality: This requires equal treatment of persons in similar situations.
Principle of proportionality: This refers to the existence of a reasonable balance between the decision taken and the objective pursued.
Legal certainty: This ensures that the administration acts in a predictable and consistent manner.
Liability of the administration: This includes compensation for damages arising from unlawful administrative acts and actions.
An administrative act refers to a unilateral act established by the administration based on public power and producing legal consequences. Appointments, disciplinary penalties, license cancellations and administrative fines are evaluated within this scope.
An annulment lawsuit against an administrative act is filed for the purpose of eliminating unlawful administrative acts. The court renders its decision by examining the act in terms of authority, form, reason, subject matter and purpose.
Administrative Jurisdiction Procedure Law No. 2577
A full remedy action is a type of lawsuit filed by persons who have suffered damage due to acts or actions of the administration, for the purpose of compensating their material and moral damages.
An annulment lawsuit aims to eliminate the administrative act.
A full remedy action aims to compensate the damage.
An annulment lawsuit focuses on unlawfulness.
A full remedy action focuses on compensation.
Time limits for filing lawsuits in administrative jurisdiction begin upon notification or awareness of the administrative act. Missing these time limits may result in dismissal of the lawsuit.
Suspension of execution is a temporary measure granted in cases where the implementation of the act subject to the lawsuit may cause damages that are difficult to remedy.
Legal support in the field of administrative law covers the examination of administrative acts, filing lawsuits, preparation of annulment and full remedy actions, and requests for suspension of execution.
It covers annulment and full remedy actions arising from administrative acts, disciplinary penalties, zoning and licensing procedures, and public personnel disputes.
They are authority, form, reason, subject matter and purpose.
It generally begins on the date the administrative act is notified.