Readership: Academics with an interest in the constitutional law of the EU; also, those with an interest in the second and third pillars as substantive areas of activity; EU public law practitioners
Alicia Hinarejos, William Golding Junior Research Fellow, Brasenose College, British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow, Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, and Assistant Professor, McGill University
"...the book lives up to its first aim of mapping out the evolution of judicial control in the former non-Community domains." - Henri de Waele, European Law Review
"...this monograph is important reading for anyone with an interest in the role of the ECJ in the EU legal order...overall the book is a recommended read for any practitioner, judge, academic or student looking for a concise and well-argued snapshot of the status of judicial protection in the European Union both before and after the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon," - Anthony Dawes, European Law Review
1: Introduction: The ECJ as a Federal Constitutional Court 1.1: The Context: Models of Constitutional Review 1.2: The ECJ as a Federal Constitutional Court 1.3: The ECJ as a Constitutional Court in the Second and Third Pillars 2: Judicial Control in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice 2.1: Introduction 2.2: The Nature of AFSJ Measures 2.3: The Jurisdiction of the ECJ at Present 2.4: Cherry-Picking: Institutional Ways to Fix Problems without the Constitutional Treaty 2.5: The Jurisdiction of the ECJ under the Lisbon Treaty 2.6: Final Remarks 3: Judicial Control in the Common Foreign and Security Policy 3.1: Introduction 3.2: The Nature of CFSP Measures 3.3: The Jurisdiction of the ECJ in CFSP at Present 3.4: The Jurisdiction of the ECJ Under the Lisbon Treaty 3.5: What the CFSP is Missing and its Consequences 4: Concluding Remarks: A Constitutional Court for the EU? 4.1: The Lisbon Treaty Bibliography Index