Administrative law also refers to public law. This is a body of law that has developed as the principles to ensure the legal public bodies act. The reasonable and fair public bodies act in a way that is legal. The reasonable and fair uses of administrative properties are the target. This law protects against the misuse or abuse of public bodies.
Administrative law forms part of the common law of England and Wales. It provides judiciary case support to the administrative properties. Apart from the UK parliament all of the other public bodies are law subordinates.
What Does Administrative Law Say?
Public bodies must not act outside of their legal powers. This ensures that both the person and the body perform any functions. During this time the law ensures the body does not perform beyond its scope and powers or in any illegal way. And make sure the person or a body does not exceed the scope of powers.
Administrative law does not concern the metrics or decisions. Whether a decision is good or bad weather is based on a correct interpretation of laws. Administrative law looks at the process of decisions and makes sure it runs on a legal basis.