1. | Gragl, Paul : The accession of the European Union to the European convention on human rights, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The accession of the European Union to the European convention on human rights / Gragl, Paul - (Modern studies in European law), xxviii, 333 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2013. ISBN 978-1-84946-460-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: INTRODUCTION—A TALE OF TWO COURTS:. 1. Setting the Scene for Accession. 2. Scope of this Book. PART II: THE AUTONOMY OF EUROPEAN UNION LAW VERSUS INTERNATIONAL LAW AND COURTS:. 3. The Notion of Legal Autonomy. 4. The EU and International Courts and Tribunals. 5. A Special Case: The Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Court of Human Rights. 6. The EU, International Law and International Courts: An Anticipating Assessment for Accession. PART III: THE ROAD FROM LUXEMBOURG TO STRASBOURG: RECONCILING ACCESSION AND AUTONOMY:. 7. The Status of the Accession Agreement and the Convention after Accession. 8. External Review by Strasbourg: A Hierarchy of Courts?. 9. Individual Applications after Accession: Introducing the Co-Respondent Mechanism. 10. Inter-Party Cases after Accession. 11. The Exhaustion of Domestic Remedies and the Prior Involvement of the Luxembourg Court. PART IV: CONCLUSIONS AND OUTLOOK:. 12. The Analytical Point of Departure: Revisiting and Answering the Research Question. 13. The Prerequisites and Consequences of Accession: A Summary of Findings. 14. Outlook and Future Perspectives. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): EU charter of fundamental rights; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; TEU; Treaty of Lisbon; UN convention on the law of the sea; Schengen agreement; ECHR; ECHRP-4; ECHRP-6; ECHRP-7; ECHRP-11; ECHRP-12; ECHRP-13; ECHRP-14; ECHRP-8; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/BookDetails.aspx?ISBN=9781849464604 |
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2. | Holzhacker, Ronald L. (ed.) : Freedom, security and justice in the European Union, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Freedom, security and justice in the European Union : internal and external dimensions of increased cooperation after the Lisbon Treaty / Holzhacker, Ronald L. (ed.) ; Luif, Paul, v, 146 p.. - Heidelberg : Springer, 2014. ISBN 978-1-4614-7879-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS.. 1. Freedom, Security, and Justice: Intern- and Extern- alization in the EU and the Member States after the Lisbon Treaty. 2. New Parliamentary Practices in Justice and Home Affairs: Some Observations. 3. Non-Binding Peer Evaluation within an Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice. 4. Redefining the relationship between security, data retention and human rights. 5. The Externalization of undocumented migration controls as a threat for the EU’s constitutional commitment to fundamental human rights? 6. Prüm Treaty and Prüm decision. 7. The Interface between the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice and the Common Foreign and Security Policy of the EU: Legal Constraints to Political Objectives? INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): EU charter of fundamental rights; Treaty of Lisbon; Schengen agreement; ECHR; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt
URL http://www.springer.com/social+sciences/political+science/book/978-1-4614-7878-2 |
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3. | Peers, Steve ... [et al.] : The EU charter of fundamental rights , 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The EU charter of fundamental rights : a commentary / Peers, Steve ... [et al.], xlii, 1893 p.. - Oxford : Hart, 2014. ISBN 978-1-84946-308-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I - COMMENTARY ON THE ARTICLES OF THE EU CHARTER OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS:. Article 1 - Human Dignity, by Catherine Dupré. Article 2 - Right to Life, by Elizabeth Wicks. Article 3 - Right to the Integrity of the Person, by Sabine Michalowski. Article 4 - Prohibition of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, by Manfred Nowak and Anne Charbord. Article 5 - Prohibition of Slavery and Forced Labour, by Heli Askola. Article 6 - Right to Liberty and Security, by Daniel Wilsher. Article 7 - Respect for Private and Family Life (Private Life, Home and Communications), by Jens Vested-Hansen. Article 7 - Right to Respect for Private and Family Life (Family Life Aspects), by Shazia Choudhry. Article 8 - Protection of Personal Data, by Herke Kranenborg. Article 9 - Right to Marry and Right to Found a Family, by Shazia Choudhry. Article 10 - Right to Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion, by Ronan McCrea. Article 11 - Freedom of Expression and Information, by Lorna Woods. Article 12 - Freedom of Assembly and of Association Article 12(1), by Filip Dorssemont. Article 12(2), by Jo Shaw and Lamin Khadar. Article 13 - Freedom of the Arts and Sciences, by Debbie Sayers. Article 14 - Right to Education, by Gisella Gori. Article 15 - Freedom to Choose an Occupation and Right to Engage in work, by Diamond Ashiagbor. Article 16 - Freedom to Conduct a Business, by Michele Everson and Rui Correia Gonçalves. Article 17 - Right to Property: Article 17(1), by Ferdinand Wollenschläger. Article 17(2), by Paul Torremans. Article 18 - Right to Asylum, by Maarten den Heijer. Article 19 - Protection in the Event of Removal, Expulsion or Extradition, by Elspeth Guild. Article 20 - Equality before the Law, by Mark Bell. Article 21 - Non-Discrimination, by Claire Kilpatrick. Article 22 - Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Diversity, by Rachael Craufurd Smith. Article 23 - Equality between Women and Men, by Dagmar Schiek. Article 24 - The Rights of the Child, by Ruth Lamont. Article 25 - The Rights of the Elderly, by Colm O'Cinneide. Article 26 - Integration of Persons with Disabilities, by Charlotte O'Brien. Article 27 - Workers' Right to Information and Consultation within the Undertaking, by Filip Dorssemont. Article 28 - Right of Collective Bargaining and Action, by Catherine Barnard. Article 29 - Right of Access to Placement Services, by Diamond Ashiagbor. Article 30 - Protection in the Event of Unjustified Dismissal, by Jeff Kenner. Article 31 - Fair and Just Working Conditions, by Alan Bogg. Article 32 - Prohibition of Child Labour and Protection of Young People at Work, by Helen Stalford. Article 33 - Family and Professional Life, by Cathryn Costello. Article 34 - Social Security and Social Assistance, by Robin White. Article 35 - The Right to Health Care, by Tamara Hervey and Jean McHale. Article 36 - Access to Services of General Economic Interest, by Erika Szyszczak. Article 37 - Environmental Protection, by Elisa Morgera and Gracia Marín Durán. Article 38 - Consumer Protection, by Steve Weatherill. Article 39 - Right to Vote and to Stand as a Candidate at Elections to the European Parliament, by Lamin Khadar and Jo Shaw. Article 40 - Right to Vote and to Stand as a Candidate at Municipal Elections, by Kees Groenendijk. Article 41 - Right to Good Administration, by Paul Craig. Article 42 - Right of Access to Documents, by Deirdre Curtin and Joana Mendes. Article 43 - European Ombudsman, by Ian Harden. Article 44 - Right to Petition, by Mats Lindfelt. Article 45 - Freedom of Movement and of Residence, by Eleanor Spaventa. Article 46 - Diplomatic and Consular Protection, by Eileen Denza. Article 47 - Right to an Effective Remedy and to a Fair Trial, by Pekka Aalto, Herwig CH Hofmann, Liisa Holopainen, Elina Paunio, Laurent Pech, Debbie Sayers, Dinah Shelton and Angela Ward. Article 48 - Presumption of Innocence and Right of Defence (Administrative Law), by Hanns Peter Nehl. Article 48 - Presumption of Innocence and Right of Defence (Criminal Law), by Debbie Sayers. Article 49 - Principles of Legality and Proportionality of Criminal Offences and Penalties, by Valsamis Mitsilegas. Article 50 - Right not to be Tried or Punished Twice in Criminal Proceedings for the same Criminal Offence, by Jonathan Tomkin. Article 51 - Field of Application, by Angela Ward. Article 52 - Scope and Interpretation of Rights and Principles, by Steve Peers and Sacha Prechal. Article 53 - Level of Protection, by Bruno de Witte. Article 54 - Abuse of Rights, by Lorna Woods. PART II - REFLECTIONS ON THE EU CHARTER OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS:. 1. THE PLACE OF THE CHARTER IN THE EU CONSTITUTIONAL EDIFICE, by Koen Lenaerts and José Antonio Gutiérrez-Fons. 2. Protocol (No 30) on the Application of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union to Poland and the United Kingdom, by Anthony Arnull. 3. The EU Fundamental Rights Agency and the Fundamental Rights Charter: How Fundamental is the Link Between them?, by Gabriel N Toggenburg. 4. The Implementation of the Charter by the Institutions of the European Union, by Olivier De Schutter. 5. The Extraterritorial Application of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights: From Territoriality to Facticity, the Effectiveness Model, by Violeta Moreno-Lax and Cathryn Costello. 6. The Charter and Universal Human Rights Instruments, by Allan Rosas. 7. Fundamental Social Rights in the Charter-Are They Rights? Are They Fundamental?, by Niilo Jääskinen. 8. The Explanations Relating to the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, by Jean-Paul Jacqué. PART III - COMMENTARY ON THE TREATY OF EU ACCESSION TO THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS:. 1. AGREEMENT ON THE ACCESSION OF THE EUROPEAN UNION TO THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS Paul Gragl. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Aarhus convention; AMR; ACHPR; CAT; ECPT; ECHR; Convention on human rights and biomedicine; Convention on the adaption of children; CERD; CEDAW; CRC; CRPD; Refugee convention; TFEU; Lisbon treaty; Arab charter on human rights; European charter for regional and minority languages; ESC; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt
URL http://www.fp7-frame.eu/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Peers_Hervey_Kenner_Ward_A5.pdf |
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4. | Azoulai, Loic (ed.) : EU migration law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph EU migration law : legal complexities and political rationales / Azoulai, Loic (ed.) ; de Vries, Karin - (The collected courses of the Academy of European law), xviii, 226 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2014. ISBN 978-0-19-870853-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction:Loïc Azoulai and Karin de Vries. 1: Helen Toner: The Lisbon Treaty and the Future of European Immigration and Asylum Law. 2: Christina Boswell: The Politics of Irregular Migration. 3: Bernd Martenczuk: Migration Policy and EU External Relations. 4: Seline Trevisanut: Which Borders for the EU Immigration Policy? Yardsticks of International Protection for EU Joint Borders Management. 5: Sergio Carrera: Integration of Immigrants in EU Law and Policy: Challenges to Rule of Law, Exceptions to Inclusion. 6: Thomas Spijkerboer: Analysing European Case-Law on Migration: Options for Critical Lawyers. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Brazil / Canada / China / Denmark / France / Germany / Iceland / Ireland / Italy / Liechtenstein / Norway / Senegal / Spain / Turkey / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): Dublin convention; EU charter of fundamental rights; ECHR; Schengen convention; Lisbon treaty; TEU; ToA; Convention on the law of the sea; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
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5. | Barnard, Catherine (ed.) : European Union law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph European Union law / Barnard, Catherine (ed.) ; Peers, Steve, cviii, 814 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2014. ISBN 978-0-19-968611-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1: Catherine Barnard & Steve Peers: Introduction. 2: Paul Craig: Development of the EU. 3: Steve Peers: The EU's political institutions. 4: Robert Schütze: Constitutionalism and the European Union. 5: Kieran St. C. Bradley: Legislating in the European Union. 6: Michal Bobek: The effects of EU law in the national legal systems. 7: Bruno de Witte: EU law: is it international law?. 8: Herwig C. H. Hofmann: General principles of EU law and EU administrative law. 9: Eleanor Spaventa: Fundamental rights in the European Union. 10: Albertina Albors-Llorens: Judicial protection before the Court of Justice of the European Union. 11: Jukka Snell: The internal market and the philosophies of market integration. 12: Peter Oliver & Martin Martinez Navarro: Free movement of goods. 13: Catherine Barnard: Free movement of natural persons. 14: Catherine Barnard with Jukka Snell: Free movement of legal persons and the provision of services. 15: Leo Flynn: Free movement of capital. 16: Niamh Nic Shuibhne: Exceptions to the free movement rules. 17: Alison Jones & Christopher Townley: Competition law. 18: Leigh Hancher & Wolf Sauter: Public services and EU law. 19: Alicia Hinarejos: Economic and monetary union. 20: Mia Rönnmar: Labour and equality law. 21: Tamara Hervey: EU health law. 22: Elisa Morgera: Environmental law. 23: Geraint Howells: European Union consumer law. 24: Geert De Baere: EU external action. 25: John R. Spencer: EU criminal law. 26: Steve Peers: Immigration and asylum. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Aarhus convention; EC treaty; SEA; Treaty of Nice; Treaty of Lisbon; EU charter of fundamental rights; ECHR; Cartagena protocol; Rio declaration; Schengen convention; UDHR; Kyoto protocol; European convention on extradition; Framework convention on climate change; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
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6. | Eisele, Katharina : The external dimension of the EU's migration policy, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The external dimension of the EU's migration policy : different legal positions of third-country nationals in the EU : a comparative perspective / Eisele, Katharina - (Immigration and asylum law and policy in Europe ; vol. 34 ), xvi, 540 p.. - Leiden : Brill, 2014. ISBN 978-90-04-26524-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of contents Part I: Introduction. Part II: EU External Relations and Migration Policy – The Historical Development of the External Dimensions. Part III: The Human Rights of Migrants: Legal Bases and Sources for EU Migration Law and Policy. Part IV: The Basis for Differential Treatment among Third-Country Nationals: EU Association Agreements and Cooperation Frameworks. Part V: The Legal Position of Third-Country Nationals: Entry, Employment and Residence Rights. Part VI: The Legal Position of Third-Country Nationas: Social Security Rights. Part VII: The Legal Position of Third-Country Nationals: Other Economic and Social Rights. Part VIII: Conclusions. Part IX: Schematic Overview of the Legal Position of Third-Country Nationals. Part X: Samenvatting. Part XI: Zusammenfassung. Part XII: Bibliography. Part XIII: EU Official Documents, Table of Cases and Index. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; EU charter of fundamental rights; ICCPR; CERD; ICESCR; SEA; TEU; TFEU; UDHR; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt
URL http://www.brill.com/products/book/external-dimension-eus-migration-policy |
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7. | Rosas, Allan (ed.) : The Court of Justice and the construction of Europe, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Court of Justice and the construction of Europe : analyses and perspectives on sixty years of case-law / Rosas, Allan (ed.) ; Levits, Egils (ed.); Bot, Yves (ed.), xiv, 727 p.. - The Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2013. ISBN 978-90-6704-896-5 LANGUAGE: ENG, FRE ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: The role of the Court of Justice and the judicial architecture of the Union. Ditlev Tamm: The history of the Court of Justice of the European Union since its origin. Gil Carlos Rodríguez Iglesias: L'évolution de l'architecture juridictionnelle de l'Union européenne. Francis G. Jacobs: The Court of Justice in the twenty-first century: challenges ahead for the judicial system?. Nial Fennelly: The national judge as a judge of the European Union. Andreas Vosskuhle: The cooperation between European courts: the Verbund of European courts and its legal toolbox. Jean-Marc Sauvé: Le rôle du comité 255 dans la sélection du juge de l'Union. Christian Pennera: La Cour de justice et le Parlement europeen. Hubert Legal: Les institutions politiques de l'Union et la Cour de justice: le point de vue du Conseil. Luis Romero Requena: La Commission devant la Cour de justice: l'exemple de la procédure préjudicielle. Sir Nicolas Bratza: The European Convention on Human Rights and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union: a process of mutual enrichment. Carl Baudenbacher: The EFTA Court and Court of Justice of the European Union: coming in parts but winning together. PART II: The constitutional order. Elena Simina Tanasescu: Rôle des droits fondamentaux dans la constitutionnalisation de l'ordre juridique de l'UE. Miroslaw Wyrzykowski: When sovereingty means so much: the concept(s) of sovereignty, European Union membership and the interpretation of the Constitution of the Republic of Poland. Jürgen Schwarze: Balancing EU integration and national interests in the case-law of the Court of Justice. José Luís da Cruz Vilaca: Le principe de l'effet utile du droit the l'Union dans la jurisprudence de la Cour. Giuseppe Tesauro: Reasonableness in the European Court of Justice case-law. Mireille Delmas-Marty: Principes d'attribution, de subsidiarité et d'identité nationale des Etats membres. Radoslav Procházka: To decide or not to decide: on the political theology of Simmenthal, Lyckeskog et al. Takis Tridimas: Bifurcated justice: the dual character of judicial protection in EU law. Ingolf Pernice: The right to effective judicial protection and remedies in the EU. Nicolas Petit: The future of the Court of Justice in EU competition law. PART III: The area of citizens. Christian Calliess: The dynamics of European citizenship: from bourgeois to citoyen. Christa Tobler: The prohibition of discrimination in the Union's layered system of equality law: from early staff cases to the Mangold approach. Ineta Ziemele: Nationality and third-country nationals. Miguel Poiares Maduro: Revisiting the free movement of goods in a comparative perspective. Catherine Barnard: Citizenship of the Union and the area of justice: (almost) the Court's moment of glory. Steve Peers: The European Arrest Warrant: the dilemmas of mutual recognition, human rights and EU citizenship. Anne Weyembergh: La jurisprudence de la CJ relative au principe ne bis in idem: une contribution essentielle à la reconnaissance mutuelle en matière pénale. Vassili Christianos: La diversité de la culture juridique européenne et la prise de décision au sein de la Cour de justice de l'Union européenne. Juha Raitio: Direct taxation and the free movement of persons. PART IV: The Union in the world. Pieter Jan Kuijper: 'It shall contribute to ... the strict observance and development of international law ...'. The role of the Court of Justice. Piet Eeckhout: Exclusive external competences: constructing the EU as an international actor. Jacqueline Dutheil de la Rochère: L'effet direct des accords internationaux. Christiaan W. A. Timmermans: The Court of Justice and mixed agreements. Stefan Griller: The Court of Jusitce and the Common Foreign and Security Policy. Marc Maresceua: The Court of Justice and bilateral agreements. George A. Bermann: Une vue outre-atlantique de la Cour et de sa jurisprudence. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Poland NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; EU charter of fundamental rights; TFEU; EEA agreement LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
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8. | O'Neill, Maria (ed.) : New challenges for the EU internal security strategy, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph New challenges for the EU internal security strategy / O'Neill, Maria (ed.) ; Swinton, Ken (ed.) ; Winter, Aaron (ed.), x, 291 p.. - Newcastle upon Tyne : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013. ISBN 978-1-4438-4477-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Maria O'Neill and Aaron Winter: New challenges for the EU internal security strategy: an introduction and overview. 2. Artur Gruszczak: EU intelligence-led policing: the case of counter-terrorism cooperation. 3. Angela Carpenter: Security and Europe's sea ports: threats and issues facing maritime getaways to Europe. 4. Yarin Eski and Angela Carpenter: Policing in EU seaports: impact of the ISPS code on port security post 9/11. 5. Ludo Block: International cooperation in private investigation of economic crime in the EU: exploring relevant issues. 6. Ken Swinton: Non conviction based asset recovery: lessons to be derived from the UK experience of civil recovery regime for the proposed directive on the freezing and confiscation of proceeds of crime in the EU. 7. Alex Balch and Glynn Rankin: Assessing the impact of EU strategies post-Stockholm on UK policing of human trafficking. 8. Maria O'Neill: Trafficking in human beings and the European neighbourhood policy: new challenges for the EU justice and law enforcement framework. 9. Daniela Irrera: The externalisation of the EU internal security strategy in the framework of multilateralism: the case of the fight against transnational organised crime. 10. Francesca Longo: The externalisation of the EU internal security strategy in the framework of multilateralism: the case of security sector reform. 11. Saskia Hufnagel: European police cooperation frameworks: a model for Australian intergovernmental coordination?. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / UK |
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9. | Bernitz, Ulf : Europarättens grunder, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Europarättens grunder / Bernitz, Ulf ; Kjellgren, Anders. - 5. uppl.., 510 p. - Stockholm : Norstedts Juridik AB, 2014. ISBN 978-91-39-20672-9 LANGUAGE: SWE ABSTRACT: INNEHÅLL:. 1. Europarätten. 2. Den europeiska integrationen: framväxt och utveckling. 3. EU:s mål och uppgifter, struktur och regelverk. 4. Institutionerna. 5. Unionsrättens förhållande till nationell rätt. 6. Allmänna rättsprinciper och grundläggande rättigheter. 7. Unionsrättens rättskällor och metod. 8. Processordningen. 9. Förhandsavgöranden. 10. EU som global aktör. 11. Den inre marknaden. 12. Fri rörlighet för varor. 13. Tjänster och etableringar. 14. Fria kapitalrörelser och EMU. 15. Unionsmedborgarskapet och den enskilda personens ställning. 16. Konkurrensrätten. 17. Rättssamarbetet: området med frihet, säkerhet och rättvisa. 18. Utblick. 19. Hur finna europarätten - dokumentation och litteratur. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Sweden NOTE (GENERAL): TEU; TFEU; EU charter of fundamental rights LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
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10. | Lenaerts, Koen : European Union law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph European Union law / Lenaerts, Koen ; van Nuffel, Piet. - 3rd ed.., ccxlix, 1083 p. - London : Sweet & Maxwell, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84703-743-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. The establishment of the European Communities. 2. Intergovernmental cooperation between EC member states. 3. Bringing together the paths of integration into the European Union. 4. From the Constitution for Europe to the Treaty of Lisbon. 5. Amendment of the treaties. 6. Accession to the European Union. 7. Principles governing the competences of the European Union. 8. Citizenship of the European Union. 9. The internal market. 10. Area of freedom, security and justice. 11. Other areas of Union policy. 12. Limits and exceptions to the application of the treaties. 13. The institutions and bodies of the Union. 14. The member states of the Union. 15. The relationship between the actors. 16. Legislation. 17. Implementation of legislation. 18. CFSP decision making. 19. Decision-making restricted to particular member states. 20. Legitimacy of decision-making. 21. Effects of Union law in the national legal systems. 22. Forms of Union law and their hierarchy. 23. Legal force of pre-Lisbon non-community law. 24. The position in international law of the Union. 25. The external powers of the Union. 26. The procedure for concluding agreements. 27. Consistency between the Common Foreign and Security Policy and other external action. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): EC treaty; SEA; Trety of Amsterdam; Treaty of Nice; Treaty of Lisbon; TEU; TFEU |
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11. | Kuzelewska, Elzbieta (ed.) : Irregular migration as a challenge for democracy, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Irregular migration as a challenge for democracy / Kuzelewska, Elzbieta (ed.) ; Weatherburn, Amy (ed.) ; Kloza, Dariusz (ed.) - (European integration and democracy series), lvii, 275 p. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2018. ISBN 978-1-78068-622-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I. THE EUROPEAN INTEGRATION PROJECT AND IRREGULAR MIGRATION: UPHOLDING FUNDAMENTAL VALUES AND PRINCIPLES. 1. Luigi Lonardo: The 'migrant crisis': member states' or EU's responsibility?. 2. Alberto Miglio: Solidarity in EU asylum and migration law: a crisis management tool or a structural principle?. 3. Graham Butler: EU foreing policy and other EU external relations in times of crisis: forcing the law to overlap?. 4. Maria Cudowska: The migration crisis in Europe: the implications for trade and labour in a globalised context. 5. Timea Drinoczi and Agoston Mohay: Has the migration crisis challenged the concept of the protection of the human rights of migrants? The case of Ilias and Ahmed v. Hungary. 6. Maria Gabrielsen Jumbert: European responses to the Mediterranean 'refugee crisis' and the fear of saving lives. PART II. MIGRANTS, THEIR RIGHTS AND THE LIMITS THEREOF. 7. Agnieszka Piekutowska and Elzbieta Kuzelewska: Economic refugees: an analysis of the phenomenon in the context of the EU migration crisis. 8. Chloé Brière: Defining the offence of migrant smuggling: when the migration crisis revives old debates. 9. Sibel Top: The collapse of the political offence exemption in EU extradition law: the end of political asylum?. PART III. THE STATUS QUO OF MIGRATION IN EUROPE: SELECTED NATIONAL PERSPECTIVES. 10. Lino Panzeri: The governance of the migrant crisis in Italy. 11. Magdalena Perkowska: The impact of the migration crisis on Polish immigration and criminal law. 12. Lehte Roots: The role of NGOs as partners in migration management in Estonia: a case study. 13. Halina Sierocka: Linguistic integration of adult migrants in the era of the migration crisis. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Estonia / Hungary / Italy / Poland |