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Paul Craig, Gráinne de Búrca
£39.99
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The Evolution of EU Law
Second Edition
Edited by Paul Craig and Gráinne de Búrca
984 pages
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246x171mm
978-0-19-959296-8
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Paperback
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17 February 2011
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- Provides a comprehensive overview of the evolution of EU law over the last decade, giving a clearer understanding of the broader picture of EU legal development
- Examines EU law in the broader context of the social and political influences on legal development
- Includes coverage of the major institutional and constitutional reforms, as well as developments in the substantive law
The European Union has undergone major changes in the last decade, including Treaty reform, and a significant expansion of activity in foreign and security policy, and justice and home affairs.
In the first edition of this influential textbook, a team of leading lawyers and political scientists reflected upon the important developments in their chosen area over the time since the EC was formed. This new edition continues this analysis ten years on. Taking into account the social and political background, and without losing sight of the changes that came before, in each
chapter the contributors analyze the principle themes and assess the legal and political forces that have shaped its development.
Each author addresses a specific topic, event, or theme, from the European Court of Justice to Treaty reform; the enlargement of the EU to administrative law; the effect of EU law on culture to climate change. Together the chapters tell the story of the rapid development of EU law - its past, present, and future.Readership: Undergraduate and postgraduate students studying courses in EU law, academics researching EU law, professionals engaged in the EU and EU law.
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Edited by Paul Craig, Professor of English Law, University of Oxford, and Fellow of St John's College, and Gráinne de Búrca, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School Professor Paul Craig, FBA, QC, has taught at Oxford since 1976. He has written extensively about EU Law, including EU Law, Text Cases and Materials, written with Grainne de Burca, EU Administrative Law, and The Lisbon Treaty.
Grainne de Burca is Professor at Harvard Law School. She was Professor of Law at Fordham Law School from 2006-2009, Professor of EU Law at the European University Institute from 1998-2005, and Fellow and Lecturer in law at Oxford University from 1990-1998. Her books include EU Law: Text, Cases and Materials, (currently in its 4th edition and co-written with Paul Craig); Law and New Governance in the European Union and the United States, co-edited with Joanne Scott, and EU Law and the Welfare State.
Contributors: Catherine Barnard, Trinity College, University of Cambridge Mark Bell, School of Law, University of Leicester Kieran St Clair Bradley, Head of Unit, European Parliament Legal Service Paul Craig, St John's College, University of Oxford Marise Cremona, European University Institute, Florence Rachael Craufurd Smith, University of Edinburgh Deirdre M. Curtin, University of Amsterdam and Utrecht University Gráinne De Búrca, Harvard Law School Ige F. Dekker, Utrecht University Thomas de la Mare, Blackstone Chambers, London Bruno de Witte, European
University Institute, Florence Catherine Donnelly, Blackstone Chambers, London, and Trinity College Dublin Michael Dougan, Liverpool Law School Leigh Hancher, Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University Carol Harlow, London School of Economics, Emeritus Christophe Hillion, Universities of Leiden and Stockholm Pierre Larouche, Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University Imelda Maher, University College Dublin Siofra O'Leary, College of Europe, Bruges Steve Peers, University of Essex Joanne Scott, University College London Martin Shapiro, University of California Berkeley School of Law Jo Shaw, University of
Edinburgh Jukka Snell, Swansea University School of Law Francis Snyder, London School of Economics and Université Paul Cézanne (Aix-Marseille III) Alec Stone Sweet, Yale Law School Eva Storskrubb, Senior Associate at Dittmar & Indrenius, Helsinki Takis Tridimas, Queen Mary School of Law, London Stephen Weatherill, Somerville College, University of Oxford
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Review(s) from previous edition
"This is a serious, comprehensive exploration of the understanding of EU law as it has developed. - Edward Kirke, Liverpool John Moores University
"This volume, like many books of its kind, poses more questions than it has answers for, but the answers it suggests are crucial, seminal and riveting to anyone interested in why a nation or a corporate body has a constitution. ... the editors have done a masterly job in weaving together crucial research and opinion on such issues as comitology, delegated agencies, tertiary structures in general and the enumeration and control of them. The heavy intellectualism of this book should not obscure the luminosity of its arguments, which, after all, remain easy to understand." - Michael L Nash, Contemporary Review, December 1999 Page 322
"...an excellent collection of strong and thought-provoking contributions...an extremely accessible account of the story of EU law." - T.K. Hervey, University of Nottingham, European Public Law
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1: Paul Craig: Introduction
2: Paul Craig: Integration, Democracy, and Legitimacy
3: Paul Craig: Institutions, Power, and Institutional Balance
4: Kieran St Clair Bradley: Powers and Procedures in the EU Constitution: Legal Bases and the Court
5: Martin Shapiro: Independent Agencies
6: Alec Stone Sweet: The European Court of Justice
7: Deirdre M. Curtin & Ige F. Dekker: The European Union from Maastricht to Lisbon: Institutional and Legal Unity out of the Shadows
8: Christophe Hillion: EU Enlargement
9: Marise Cremona: External Relations and External Competence of the European Union: The Emergence of an Integrated Policy
10: Steve Peers: EU Justice and Home Affairs Law (non-civil)
11: Eva Storskrubb: Civil Justice - A Newcomer and an Unstoppable Wave?
12: Bruno de Witte: Direct Effect, Primacy and the Nature of the Legal Order
13: Thomas de la Mare & Catherine Donnelly: Preliminary Rulings and EU Legal Integration: Evolution and Stasis
14: Michael Dougan: The Vicissitudes of Life at the Coalface: Remedies and Procedures for Enforcing Union Law before the National Courts
15: Carol Harlow: Three Phases in the Evolution of EU Administrative Law
16: Gráinne De Búrca: The Evolution of EU Human Rights Law
17: Siofra O'Leary: Free Movement of Persons and Services
18: Jukka Snell: Free Movement of Capital: Evolution as a Non-Linear Process
19: Jo Shaw: Citizenship: Contrasting Dynamics at the Interface of Integration and Constitutionalism
20: Mark Bell: The Principle of Equal Treatment: Widening and Deepening
21: Catherine Barnard: EU 'Social' Policy: From Employment Law to Labour Market Reform
22: Francis Snyder: EMU - Integration and Differentiation: Metaphor for European Union
23: Imelda Maher: Competition Law Modernization: An Evolutionary Tale?
24: Leigh Hancher & Pierre Larouche: The Coming of Age of EU Regulation of Network Industries and Services of General Economic Interest
25: Takis Tridimas: EU Financial Regulation: Federalization, Crisis Management and Law Reform
26: Joanne Scott: The Multi-Level Governance of Climate Change
27: Stephen Weatherill: Consumer Policy
28: Rachael Craufurd Smith: Culture and European Union Law: Always the Bridesmaid, Never the Bride?
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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