68 Law and Contemporary Problems (2005)

Decentralized Administrative Law in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

symposium-8

James Salzman

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This article commences with a description of the OECD. Since the organization does not garner much attention from scholars or the public, Section II describes the organization’s origins and operations, and offers examples of its activities. Section III then provides four case studies that examine the OECD’s multiple roles and how these bear on the development of the organization’s administrative law. The cases range from traditional treaty-making, to consensus development of standards, to quasi-judicial review of the actions of multinational enterprises. Each of these examples relies on different types of administrative mechanisms to address the core concerns of transparency, responsiveness, and accountability. The concluding section builds off of these case studies, exploring whether administrative law safeguards should apply to OECD activities that, while not lawmaking themselves, exert important influence on domestic lawmaking and underscores why the OECD has adopted a decentralized model of administrative law.