Dictionary Definition
regulation adj : prescribed by or according to
regulation; "regulation army equipment"
Noun
1 an authoritative rule [syn: ordinance]
2 a principle or condition that customarily
governs behavior; "it was his rule to take a walk before
breakfast"; "short haircuts were the regulation" [syn: rule]
3 the state of being controlled or governed
4 (embryology) the ability of an early embryo to
continue normal development after its structure has been somehow
damaged or altered
5 the act of bringing to uniformity; making
regular [syn: regularization, regularisation]
6 the act of controlling or directing according
to rule; "fiscal regulations are in the hands of politicians" [syn:
regulating]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
law or administrative rule
- Arabic:
- Chinese: 規則 (guīzé)
- Czech: nařízení
- Dutch: regeling
- Finnish: säännös
- French: règlement
- German: Regelung
- Hungarian: előírás, szabály
- Italian: regolamento
- Japanese: 規則 (きそく, kisóku)
- Korean: 규칙 (gyuchik)
- Norwegian: regulering
- Portuguese: regulamento
- Russian: устав (ustáv)
- Spanish: reglamento
- Swedish: reglering
Extensive Definition
- ''This article is for the legal term. For regulation of genes, see regulation of gene expression. For the regulation of sports, see Regulation of sport. For regulation in electrical systems see Voltage regulator. For biological regulation, see homeostasis''
Regulation mandated by a state attempts to produce outcomes
which might not otherwise occur, produce or prevent outcomes in
different places to what might otherwise occur, or produce or
prevent outcomes in different timescales than would otherwise
occur. Common examples of regulation include attempts to control
market entries, prices,
wages, pollution effects, employment for certain people
in certain industries,
standards of production for certain goods,
the military forces and
services. The economics of imposing or
removing regulations relating to markets is analysed in regulatory
economics.
Regulation and Statute
A statute is passed by the legislature. A statute can have regulatory intent.An implementing regulation (in democratic systems
using laws as the basis for state action) is adopted by a public
administration regulatory
agency. In some national venues, there may be further review,
as by an Office of Administrative Law (OAL). In countries with
well established judicial systems, the regulation will be subject
to judicial review, on challenge by a party having standing to
bring an action ('standing' is usually interpreted to mean being
adversely affected).
Regulation as a legal term
A regulation is a form of secondary legislation
which is used to implement a primary piece of legislation
appropriately, or to take account of particular circumstances or
factors emerging during the gradual implementation of, or during
the period of, a primary piece of legislation.
Other forms of secondary legislation are
statutory instruments, statutory orders, by-laws and rules. Some of
these (but not all of them) need to be referred back before being
implemented, to the primary legislative process.
Types of regulation
Regulations, like any other form of coercive action, have costs for some and benefits for others. Efficient regulations may only be said to exist where the total benefits to some people exceed the total costs to others.Regulations are justified using a variety of
reasons and therefore can be classified in several broad
categories:
- Market
failures - regulation due to inefficiency. Intervention due to
a classical
economics argument to market failure.
- Risk of monopoly
- Collective action, or public good
- Inadequate information
- Unseen externalities
- Collective desires - regulation about collective desires or considered judgements on the part of a significant segments of society
- Diverse experiences - regulation with a view of eliminating or enhancing opportunities for the formation of diverse preferences and beliefs
- Social subordination - regulation aimed to increase or reduce social subordination of various social groups
- Endogenous preferences - regulation's purpose is to affect the development of certain preferences on an aggregate level
- Irreversibility - regulation that deals with the problem of irreversibility – the problem in which a certain type of conduct from current generations results in outcomes from which future generations may not recover from at all.
- Interest group transfers - regulation that results from efforts by self-interest groups to redistribute wealth in their favor, which may disguise itself as one or more of the justifications above.
Deregulation, Regulatory Reform and Liberalization
The second half of the 20th Century saw a wave of
attempts to modify some existing regulatory structures and
systematize the creation and review of new ones. A part of this was
the deregulation
movement.
A parallel development with 'deregulation' has
been organized, ongoing programs to review regulatory initiatives
with a view to minimizing, simplifying, and making more cost
effective regulations. Such efforts, given impetus by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980 in the United States, are embodied in
the United States Office of Management and Budget's
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, and the United
Kingdom's
Better Regulation Commission. Cost-benefit
analysis is frequently used in such reviews. In addition, there
have been regulatory innovations, usually suggested by economists,
such as emissions
trading. Academic research on wedding economic theory with
regulatory activity continues.
From other point of view, liberalization does not
always imply deregulation, but more players in the Market (desoligolipolization).
International experience
United Kingdom
An example in Britain is that there is primary, central government legislation covering the operations of local government, such as devolution. These functions include education, social services, leisure or provision.In that primary legislation there are provisions
to allow local authorities to legislate for themselves, within
reason and under proper process, on a range of matters in their
areas of responsibility. This allows the law to be effectively
applied with appropriate flexibility and taking account of local
factors. These are often best known by the local authority
concerned.
Regulations also assist the primary legislative
process, the
national parliament, to avoid the potential bottleneck of the
detailed implementation of all the laws it produces in all the
varying circumstances throughout the land or throughout the process
of their implementation.
Since 1997, central government has been working
to improve regulation by applying new principles of better
regulation.
France
In French law, the difference between statute law, adopted by the legislative branch and regulation is of paramount importance when it comes to adoption, amendment or judicial review. The French constitution reserves a number of topics for statute law; in normal times, the executive branch may take decisions on such matters only if it has been specifically authorized by a statute to do so as secondary legislation through decrees, or if it has been specifically and rarely authorized by the legislative branch to do so as primary legislation through ordinances. On all other matters, the executive branch is solely responsible for issuing primary legislation through decrees. Secondary or tertiary legislation may come in the form of arrêtés.All legislation and regulation issued by the
executive, including ordinances not ratified by the legislative
branch, is subject to judicial review by the administrative
courts, such as the Conseil
d'État.
European Union
EU regulation has a general scope, and is obligatory in all its elements and directly applicable in all Member States of the European Union. Any local laws contrary to the regulation are overruled, as EU Law has supremacy over the laws of the Member States. New legislation enacted by Member states must be consistent with the requirements of EU regulations. For these reasons regulations constitute the most powerful or influential of the EU legislative acts.Other forms of legislative acts of the European
Union (EU) are directives,
decisions,
recommendations and opinions.
See also
External links
- A Comparative Bibliography: Regulatory Competition on Corporate Law
- See Regulation & Governance, A new Blackwell Journal dedicated for the study of Regulation
- Reports of UK practice from the Better Regulation Commission
- A glimpse into some United Kingdom deregulatory procedures
- An Introduction to Regulation
- Regulation updates service on the UK government Business Link website
- The ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance maintains a website that is dedicated to the subject
- The Mercatus Center at George Mason University has a Regulatory Studies Program
- ReguStand dedicated for helping SMEs manage regulation
- Regulatory law in the UK
regulation in German: Marktregulierung
regulation in Spanish: Reglamento
regulation in French: Réglementation
regulation in Hebrew: רגולציה
regulation in Hungarian: Árszabályozás
regulation in Malay (macrolanguage): Aturan
Undang-Undang
regulation in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Føreskrift
regulation in Russian: Регламентация
regulation in Ukrainian: Постанова
regulation in Chinese: 行政法规
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Procrustean law, accepted, accommodation, accustomed, act, adaptation, adjustment, administration, assimilation, attunement, authoritative, authority, average, balance, balancing, bill, binding, bylaw, canon, canonical, charting, civil government,
coaptation, code, codification, command, commandment, common, commonplace, conduct, conformable, consuetudinary, control, convention, conventional, coordination, criterion, current, customary, decree, decretum, dictate, dictated, dictation, dictum, didactic, direction, directive, discipline, dispensation, disposition, edict, empery, empire, enactment, established, everyday, familiar, fiat, fixing, form, form of government, formality, formula, formulary, general orders,
general principle, generally accepted, golden rule, governance, government, guidance, guideline, guiding principle,
habitual, handling, hard and fast,
harmonization,
household, husbandry, imperative, institution, instruction, instructive, integration, jus, law, law of nature, lead, leading, legislation, lex, maintenance, management, managery, managing, mandatory, manipulation, maxim, measure, methodization, mitzvah, modification, modulation, moral, norm, norma, normal, normalization, normative, obtaining, official, order, order of nature, ordering, ordinance, ordinary, ordination, ordonnance, organization, oversight, pilotage, planning, political
organization, polity,
popular, precept, preceptive, predominating, prescribed, prescribed form,
prescript, prescription, prescriptive, prevailing, prevalent, principium, principle, proclamation, pronouncement, rationalization,
received, reconcilement, reconciliation, regime, regimen, regnancy, regular, regularization, reign, required, routinization, rubric, rule, ruling, running, set, set form, setting, settled principle,
sovereignty,
squaring, standard, standing order,
statute, statutory, steerage, steering, stock, supervision, sway, synchronization, system
of government, systematization,
tenet, the conn, the helm,
the wheel, time-honored, timing, traditional, typical, ukase, universal, universal law,
usual, vernacular, widespread, wonted, working principle,
working rule