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Continuity and Change in EU Law
Essays in Honour of Sir Francis Jacobs
von Anthony Arnull, Piet Eeckhout, Takis Tridimas
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-19-921903-2
Erschienen am 18.06.2008
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 241 mm [H] x 166 mm [B] x 38 mm [T]
Gewicht: 973 Gramm
Umfang: 546 Seiten

Preis: 173,50 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

The last two decades have seen momentous changes to the character of the European Union and its legal order. This volume provides a collection of essays examining the major developments in European Union law over the period. The essays are written in honour of Sir Francis Jacobs, who served as one of the British members of the European Court of Justice from 1988 to 2006. The contributors are distinguished figures drawn from a variety of backgrounds, including the national and European judiciaries, legal practice and the academic world.



Anthony Arnull is Professor of European Law and Head of the Birmingham Law School at the University of Birmingham. In 1994 he was awarded a Jean Monnet Chair by the European Commission. Professor Arnull is joint Editor of the European Law Review. Professor Arnull worked at the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg as a référendaire in the chambers of Advocate General FG Jacobs. Professor Arnull is the author of The General Principles of EEC Law and the Individual (Leicester University Press, 1990) and The European Union and its Court of Justice (Oxford University Press, 2nd ed, 2006) and a co-author of Wyatt and Dashwood's European Union Law (Sweet & Maxwell, 5th ed, 2006). He is co-editor (with Daniel Wincott) of an interdisciplinary collection of essays entitled Accountability and Legitimacy in the European Union (Oxford University Press, 2002).
Piet Eeckhout has been Professor of European Law at King's College London since 1998, and directs the Centre of European Law. He is an associate academic member of Matrix Chambers, London. He is editor, with Prof Tridimas, of the Yearbook of European Law (Oxford University Press) and is the author of External Relations of the European Union - Legal and Constitutional Foundations (Oxford EC Law Library, Oxford University Press 2004) and of The European Internal Market and International Trade - A Legal Analysis (Oxford University Press 1994).
Takis Tridimas LLB (Athens), LL.M, PhD (Cantab) is the Sir John Lubbock Professor of Banking Law and the Deputy Director of the Centre for Commercial Law Studies. He is also Professor at the Dickinson School of Law of the Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of numerous publications including The General Principles of EU Law (Second Ed., OUP, 2006) and Tridimas and Nebbia (Eds), EU Law for the 21st century: Rethinking the New Legal Order", Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2004. He is the co-editor (with Professor Eeckhout) of the Yearbook of European Law (Oxford University Press), and the general editor of the International Financial Law series (Edward Edgar publishers). He is a Barrister (Middle Temple) at Matrix Chambers and an Advocate (Bar of Athens).



  • Foreword

  • Preface

  • List of Contributors

  • Table of Abbreviations

  • Part I: Institutional Questions

  • 1: Konrad Schiemann: The Functioning of the Court of Justice in an Enlarged Union and the Future of the Court

  • 2: Eleanor Sharpston: The Changing Role of the Advocate General

  • 3: Nicholas Forwood: The Court of the First Instance, its Development and Future Role in the Legal Architecture of the European Union

  • 4: David Vaughan and Margaret Gray: Litigation in Luxembourg and the Role of the Advocate at the Court of Justice

  • 5: Takis Tridimas and Sara Poli: Locus Standi of individuals under Article 230(4): The Return of Euridice?

  • 6: Carl Baudenbacher
    : The EFTA Court, the ECJ and the Latter's Advocates General - A Tale of Judicial Dialogue



  • Part II: Fundamental Rights

  • 7: Antonio Tizzano: The Role of the ECJ in the Protection of Fundamental Rights

  • 8: Robin C. A. White: The Strasboug Perspective and its Effect on the Court of Justice: Is Mutual Respect Enough?

  • 9: Jacqueline Dutheil de la Rochère: The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, Not Binding but Influential: the Example of Good Administration

  • 10: Jeffrey Jowell
    : Administrative Justice and Standards of Substantive Judicial Review



  • Part III: Internal Market and Economic and Monetary Union

  • 11: Laurence W. Gormley: The Definition of Measure Having Equivalent Effect

  • 12: Vanessa Edwards and Paul Farmer: The Concept of Abuse in the Freedom of Establishment of Companies: A Case of Double Standards?

  • 13: Andrea Biondi: Recurring Cycles in the Internal Market: Some Reflections on the Free Movement of Services

  • 14: David Edward and Niamh Nic Shuibhne: Continuity and Change in the Law Relating to Services

  • 15: Eva Lomnicka: The Financial Services Single Market and the Interface Between Community Law and Domestic Law

  • 16: David T Keeling: Equal before the Law? Not if you Want to Register a Trade Mark

  • 17: J A Usher
    : The Evolution of Economic and Monetary Union - Some Legal Issues



  • Part 4: External Relations

  • 18: Piet Eeckhout: A Panorama of Two Decades of EU External Relations Law

  • 19: Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann: Multilevel Constitutionalism and Judicial Protection of Freedom and Justice in the International Economic Law of the EC

  • 20: Alan Dashwood: Dual-use Goods: (Mis)Understanding Werner and Leifer

  • 21: John H Jackson
    : Direct Effect of Treaties in the US and EU, the Case of the WTO: Some Perceptions and Proposals



  • Part 5: General Issues

  • 22: Trevor C Hartley: The European Court, the Brussels Convention / Regulation and the Establishment of an Efficient System for International Litigation in Europe

  • 23: Walter Van Gerven: About Rules and Principles, Codification and Legislation, Harmonization and Convergence, and Education in the Area of Contract Law

  • 24: Anthony Arnull: The Americanization of EU Law Scholarship

  • 25: Giuseppe Tesauro: The Effect of EU Law on the Italian Courts

  • 26: Nial Fennelly: The Effect of European Community Law on Irish Law and the Irish Constitution

  • Index