Administrative Law is the branch of law that includes a set of standards in general, the abstract of a material nature, under the generally applicable principles in the subjective sense, governing the legal position of senior legal entities of public administration bodies. These standards affect both directly by establishing their duties and powers, the implementation of which is controlled by public authorities as well as indirectly through the use of standards by administrative decision authority. One characteristic of the standards of administrative law is the possibility of using state coercion to enforce it.
The concept of administrative law is an umbrella term for the right of the government action in the field of public law unconstitutional law. Administrative law deals with the execution of the laws and the actual management in the federal, state and local governments.
Administrative law is thus the counterpart of the state law - one is on the constitutional level, the other in including at the level of the hierarchy.
Basically, you divide the administrative law in two areas:
•General Administrative Law
•The special administrative law
The administrative law as a separate area of law also has its own procedural law, which is also viewed as part of administrative law, the so-called Administrative Procedure Law. The general administrative law deals with all areas of special administrative law rules in administrative law (Pound, 1981). In particular, this area of law concerned with the administrative procedures for the adoption of administrative acts, the question of the general legality of administrative action, with legal sources, government liability, and the like.
The special administrative law is the collective term for various legal areas of substantive administrative law. These are in particular:
•The Police Law (emergency law)
•The building regulations (zoning laws and building regulations)