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A union list of serials commencing publication after Dec. 31, 1949.
Since its foundation, the Council of Europe has established a common legal system for European states, based on democracy, the rule of law and human rights. Its standard-setting texts have helped its members meet the challenges of changing societies and now apply all over Europe given the organisation¿s unprecedented geographical enlargement since 1989. In this connection, the Council of Europe has played a key role in the accession of the new member states to the European Union. The first section of the book deals with the "constitutional" law of the Council of Europe, or its internal statutes in the broad sense. It covers the 1949 Statute, which, along with related texts, lays down the Council¿s aims and determines its membership and operating methods. The second section concerns the role played by the Council of Europe - which has always been very active in standard-setting - in the harmonisation of European states¿ domestic law. The third section situates Council of Europe law in the European context. For instance, it studies the extent to which Council of Europe conventions have been incorporated in domestic law and how Council of Europe law and European Union law co-exist.
Since 1990, significant political changes in Europe have also had an impact on the functioning of the Parliamentary Assembly. This publication emphasizes the practical way in which the Assembly operates and describes its political and institutional context.--Publisher's description.
Includes entries for maps and atlases.
La publication de ce Dixieme Volume marque une etape dans l'histoire de l'Annuaire Europeen. C'est en juin 1953 que le Comite des Ministres du Conseil de l'Europe approuvait une pro position presentee par mon eminent et regrette predecesseur, feu Leon MARCHAL, et mise au point par un autre grand Europeen, feu M. Amold STRUYCKEN, premier Directeur politique et deu xieme Greffier de l'Assemblee du Conseil de l'Europe. La pre paration de ce projet fut facilitee grâce au concours du Dr. B. LANDHEER, Directeur de la Bibliotheque du Palais de la Paix a La Haye, qui est maintenant le Redacteur en Chef de l'Annuaire et celui de la maison d'edition Martinus NIJHOFF qui a toujours publie cet ouvrage ...
This book argues that early European Commission officials envisaged an integrated civil Europe from the outset. Largely overlooked is the fact that between 1951 and 1972 there was a group of European Commission (and before that the High Authority) officials who wished to build a Civil Europe to sit alongside an economic and political Europe. This Civil Europe was, it was hoped, to become home to a European citizenry equipped with a European civil consciousness that complemented their national and local loyalties. To this end these officials pioneered a series of civil initiatives designed to begin the process of building Civil Europe. This book analyses three such civil initiatives: the building of the first European School, the European Community’s participation in Expo 58 and the production of the European Community’s own documentaries. From the start Europe was designed and conceived of in terms of a European general civil public and not solely in terms dictated by economic and political interests.