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The Coherence of EU Law
The Search for Unity in Divergent Concepts
Edited by Sacha Prechal and Bert van Roermund
580 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-923246-8
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Hardback
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24 January 2008
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This item is printed to order and supplied on a firm sale basis. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- Provides original analyses of core problems facing the coherent application of EU Law - asking how unity can be achieved in a system based on legal and linguistic diversity
- Combines perspectives from practice, legal theory, and doctrinal analysis to present a comprehensive examination of the questions facing the understanding and domestic application of EU law
- Represents the results of a collective research project spanning several years, presenting a focused and coherent exploration of the issues
- Case studies analyse core areas of EU policy against the backdrop of legal divergence, including energy regulation, the protection of fundamental rights and social policy
The EU legal order sits above a diverse mix of 27 national legal systems, with some 23 different languages. Amongst such diversity, how can the unity and coherence of the European legal system be guaranteed? Is there a common understanding between lawyers from different national backgrounds as to the meaning and application of EU law?
In addressing these issues the idea of 'common concepts' has played a crucial role - it is argued that the unity of the system is guaranteed by the consistent application of certain core
principles shaping the law. To what extent can these concepts be trusted to provide a firm basis for the coherence of the EU legal order?
Believers in common concepts argue that there is a relatively clear, shared and accepted framework of ideas, providing an understanding of the system that is ultimately unified in spite of all apparent divergence. Sceptics hold that there is no such framework; 'common concepts' turn out to be additional sources of misunderstanding, confusion and, subsequently, legal divergence. According to a third thesis, there is indeed no common conceptual core, but the necessary unity and coherence of EU law can be articulated and even reinforced through the use of divergent concepts.
The contributors to this
collection of essays address these issues from different disciplinary perspectives - legal sociology, linguistics, comparative law, European legal scholarship, legal theory and practical experience. The research group focused on the application of two general themes: the protection of rights and judicial discretion. In addition to the thematic research, case studies from core policy sectors are featured, including energy regulation and social policy.Readership: Academics and postgraduate students working in European law, particularly the theory of EU law, the constitutional law of the EU and the reception of EU law into domestic legal systems. The book will also interest general legal theorists, particularly
theorists working on linguistics and law.
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Edited by Sacha Prechal, Professor of European Law, University of Utrecht, and Bert van Roermund, Professor in the Philosophy of Law, Tilburg University Contributors: Sacha Prechal, Utrecht University Thomas Vandamme, Utrecht University Bert van Roermund, Tilburg University Linda Senden, Tilburg University Leo Mulders, European Court of Justice Translation Service Michele Graziadei, Università del Piemonte Orientale, Alessandria Sasa Beljin, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster Ricardo Alonso Garcia, Ministry of Education, Madrid Leonor Moral, Universidad de Granada Carmen Plaza Martin, University of Toledo Roberto Caranta, Universitá di Torino Michiel Brand, Tilburg University Martina Künnecke, University of Hull Matthias Ruffert, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena Hans Lindahl, Tilburg University Inigo del Guayo Castiella, University of Almería Emilios Christodoulidis, University of Edinburgh Ruth Dukes, University of Glasgow Joxerramon Bengoetxea, Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law Niilo Jääskinen, Supreme Administrative Court of Finland Filomena Chirico, Tilburg University Pierre Larouche, Tilburg University Koen
Lenaerts, European Court of Justice Tim Courthaut, Catholic University, Leuven
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Sacha Prechal and Bert van Roermund: Binding unity in EU legal order: An Introduction
I. Observations from Legal Practice
1: Thomas Vandamme, Sacha Prechal, Bert van Roermund and Linda Senden: Experiences from Professional Practice - some steps towards empirical research
2: Leo Mulders: Translation at the European Court of Justice
II. Rights
3: Michele Graziadei: Rights in the European Landscape. A Historical and Comparative Profile
4: Sasa Beljin: Rights in European Union Law
5: Ricardo Alonso Garcia, Leonor Moral, Carmen Plaza: EU Rights and Discretion as reflected in Spanish Public Law
6: Sacha Prechal: Protection of Rights: How Far?
III. Discretion
7: Roberto Caranta: On Discretion
8: Michiel Brand: Discretion, Divergence and Unity
9: Martina Künnecke: Divergence and the Francovich remedy in German and English courts
10: Matthias Ruffert: ability and Flexibility in Administrative Decision Making - The Community Law Influence on Discretion with Respect to Administrative Decisions in German Law
11: Thomas Vandamme: Democracy and Direct Effect - EU and National Perceptions of Discretion
12: Hans Lindahl: Discretion and Public Policy: Timing the Unity and Divergence of Legal Orders
13: Bert van Roermund: Laws At Cross Purposes: Conceptual Confusion and Political Divergence
IV. Policy Areas
14: Inigo del Guayo: Binding unity and divergence while Creating a Common European culture of energy regulation
15: Linda Senden: Conceptual Convergence and Judicial Cooperation in Sex Equality Law
16: Emilios Christodoulidis & Ruth Dukes: On the Unity of European Labour Law
17: Joxerramon Bengoetxea: A case of multidirectional constitutional transplant in the EU: Infra-state Law and Regionalism
V. Outlooks
18: Niilo Jääskinen: Back to the Begriffshimmel? - A plea for an analytical perspective in European law
19: Filomena Chirico and Pierre Larouche: Conceptual divergence, functionalism and the economics of convergence
20: Koen Lenaerts and Tim Courthaut: Towards an Internally Consistent Doctrine on Invoking Norms of EU Law
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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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