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European Citizenship under Stress
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 562

European Citizenship under Stress

  • Categories: Law
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2020-09-07
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  • Publisher: BRILL

European citizenship is facing numerous challenges, including fundamental rights and social justice considerations. These get amplified in the context of Brexit and the general rise of populism in Europe today. This book takes a representative selection of these challenges, which raise a multitude of highly complex issues, as an invitation to provide a critical appraisal of the current state of the EU legal framework surrounding EU citizenship. The contributions are grouped in four parts, dealing with constitutional developments posing challenges to EU citizenship; the limits of the free movement paradigm in the context of EU citizenship; EU citizenship beyond free movement; and, lastly, EU citizenship in the context of the outside world, including Brexit, the EEA and Eurasian Economic Union.

European Union Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1083

European Union Law

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2011
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Revision of the author's Constitutional law of the European Union.

The Internal Market Ideal
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 483

The Internal Market Ideal

  • Categories: Law

The Internal Market Ideal is an essay collection honouring Professor Stephen Weatherill. A reference to his seminal work The Internal Market as a Legal Concept (OUP, 2016), this volume celebrates Weatherill's scholarship and examines the legal issues surrounding the semi-integrated market of the European Union.

EU Citizenship and Federalism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 869

EU Citizenship and Federalism

  • Categories: Law

Leading experts in EU constitutional law examine the foundational importance of citizenship rights in delimiting the scope of EU law.

Citizenship and Residence Sales
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 585

Citizenship and Residence Sales

  • Categories: Law

Citizenship and residence by investment is a fast-growing global phenomenon. As of 2022, more than a third of all countries in the world offered paths to membership in exchange for a donation or investment into their economies. Yet we know little about how these programmes operate and debates in academia and the wider public are often misinformed by sensationalist cases. This book offers a multidisciplinary exploration of both citizenship and residence by investment on a global scale. Bringing together the expertise of leading legal scholars, economists, sociologists, political scientists, and historians, it provides an informative and empirically grounded assessment of the origins, operation, key causes, and the legal bases of the investment migration programmes. By so doing, the volume demystifies citizenship and residence by investment and takes a critical postcolonial global perspective, addressing key issues in belonging, exclusion, and inequality that define the world today.

Subnational Authorities in EU Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

Subnational Authorities in EU Law

  • Categories: Law

This book explores the role and status of local and regional authorities (also referred to as 'subnational authorities' or 'SNAs') in European Union law, and reveals the existence of two parallel yet opposed constitutional imaginations of the supranational legal order. Through a survey of various areas of EU law, including primary and secondary legislation, case law as well as various soft law instruments, Finck introduces two narratives. These are the 'outsider narrative' and the 'insider narrative' that frame these constitutional imaginations. According to the outsider narrative, the structure of the legal order is bi-centric, composed of the member states and the EU only. This narrative e...

EU Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 703

EU Law

  • Categories: Law

Provides up-to-date, accessible, and intellectually sophisticated insights on EU Law using real-life examples and current case studies.

The Principle of Loyalty in EU Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 354

The Principle of Loyalty in EU Law

  • Categories: Law

The principle of loyalty requires the EU and its Member States to co-operate sincerely towards the implementation of EU law. Under the principle, the European courts have developed significant public law duties on States to deepen the reach of EU law. This is the first full-length analysis of the loyalty principle and its legal implications.

Market Supervision in the European Union
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 399

Market Supervision in the European Union

  • Categories: Law

In Market Supervision in the European Union, Pieter Van Cleynenbreugel compares and reconstructs the emergence of divergently structured supranational market supervision mechanisms in six different sectors of EU regulation (competition, financial services, chemicals, consumer law, electronic communications and energy). EU market supervision developments have been plentiful over the past decade, but have so far mainly been studied in their own sector-specific context. On the basis of an innovative cross-sector investigation, Pieter Van Cleynenbreugel identifies and conceptualises common or converging EU constitutional benchmarks underlying those sector-specific administrative design developments. Those benchmarks better allow to conceptualise, predict and restrain future EU integrated administration structures and initiatives in those and other fields of European Union law.

European Family Law Volume I
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 384

European Family Law Volume I

  • Categories: LAW

The Impact of Institutions and Organisations on European Family Law looks at the impact that institutions and organisations have had, and continue to have, on European family law. In many ways the chapters in this volume provide the easiest explanation for the existence of a European family law. While there is no European body that could actually legislate definitively on family law – even the European Union has no such mandate – there are still some obvious institutions that have a very direct impact on European family law. These can be divided into two groups; namely those that have a direct impact, such as the European Court of Human Rights and the European Union, and those that have ...