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An examination of the concealment controversy in international refugee law.
It just took a few months, and an unanticipated financial crisis, to wipe out most of the growth and employment benefits generated by the recent “EU2020” strategy. Ill-suited to the current economic environment, the EU2020 strategy must now be complemented by a new “exit” strategy, to lead the Europe Union (“EU”) out of the crisis. Upgrading the current policy instruments will undoubtedly be a daunting challenge. 2010 is expected to be the annus horribilis for employment figures in the EU, and the real impact of the crisis is still to be felt. Months after months, plants are being shut down and firms restructure. Everywhere throughout the EU, unemployment rates surge. European ci...
A state-of-the-art analysis of the contentious areas of EU law that have been put in the spotlight by populism.
Law can be looked at from both an internal legal perspective - reflected in the official discourse supporting legal decisions - and an external perspective - which is pursued by studies that look at the law from the outside as the subject of sociological, economic, or philosophical analysis. This external dimension - related to extra-legal factors that impact the law, such as the institutional environment in which the law is applied - is usually ignored, or not addressed systematically by studies that focus on the internal perspective. By systematically internalizing these 'external' elements into legal theory and practice, contextual approaches lead to the development of better descriptive ...
Ensuring an adequate, long-term energy supply is a paramount concern in Europe. The security of a country's energy supply must be guaranteed, and within the EU individual member states are acting in order to safe-guard future energy production. Governments now intervene by encouraging investment in generation capacity, offering an additional revenue stream for conventional power plants in addition to the existing, heavily subsidized investments in renewable energy sources. These capacity remuneration mechanisms (or simply capacity mechanisms) have become a hot topic in the wider European regulatory debate. European electricity markets are increasingly interconnected, so the introduction of a...
Focusing on competition, State aid, and free movement law, this book develops a conceptual framework for understanding the integration of environmental concerns in those legal domains and compares the different legal tests that have emerged for delimiting and weighing environmental considerations against other public goals.
European private international law is by now based mainly on a large body of uniform rules such as the Regulations Rome I, Rome II, Brussels I, Brussels I bis. This significant legislative output, however, does not take place in a vacuum. Rules of private international law have been earlier (and still are) adopted at national, international and even European level in scattered regulations and directives. The recent plethora of private international law rules gives rise to issues of delineation and calls for some sort of ordering as gaps, overlaps and contradictions become flagrant. At the same time, the resulting interactions can offer new insight, ideas and even opportunities at a more theo...
This volume provides a complete breakdown of all EC competition law developments in the last year, clearly laid out to ensure the relevant information is easily accessible. It also contains all the relevant EC legislation, cases and decisions, helping you work effectively through this area of law.
Capacity remuneration mechanisms (or simply capacity mechanisms) have become a fact of life in member states' energy markets and are one of the hottest topics in the wider European regulatory debate. Concerned about the security of electricity supply, national governments are implementing subsidy schemes to encourage investment in conventional power generation capacity, alongside already heavily subsidized renewable energy sources. With the increasingly connected European electricity markets, the introduction of a capacity mechanism in one country not only tends to distort its national market but may also have unforeseeable consequences for neighbouring electricity markets. As these mechanis...