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The Question of Competence in the European Union

The Question of Competence in the European Union

  • 作者:
  • 出版商: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN: 9780198705222
  • 出版时间 February 2014
  • 规格: Hardback , 336 pages
  • 适应领域: European Union ? 免责申明:
    Countri(es) stated herein are used as reference only

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  • 描述 
  • 大纲 
  • 作者 
  • 详细

    • Contributions to the volume come from a vast array of leading practitioners and academics in the field of EU Law
    • Provides a combination of theoretical and practical perspectives on an important field of EU legal studies
    • Assesses fundamental political issues including contributing to the discussion on the political identity of the European Union.

    The classic debate surrounding the prolific role of the European Union in defining spheres of competence and power relationships has long divided scholarly opinion. However, in recent years, the long-standing acquiescence to the broad powers of the Union has given way to the emerging perception of a competence problem in Europe. For a long period it was taken for granted that the European Community could act whenever its action was justified on the basis of the widely interpreted objectives of the Treaties. However this context has since changed. There is a widespread perception of a competence problem in Europe and the overabundance of provisions limiting the Union's competences is one of the most obvious marks left by the Lisbon Treaty. 

    This book discusses the extent to which the parameters of power throughout the Union and its Member States have been recast by the recent implementation of the Lisbon Treaty and doctrines developed by the European Court of Justice. Comprised of contributions from a vast array of leading practitioners and academics in the field of EU Law, this volume assesses the debate surrounding the political identity of the European Union, and further illustrates the relevance of the Federal theory of sharing competences for the development of EU Law. Finally, the question of new potential limits to Union's competence is addressed. If anything, this broad reflection on the notion of competence in the EU law context is a way of opening up the question of the nature and contours of the political identity of the European Union.

    Readership: This book would be suited to academics and European and National Institutions

  • Loïc Azoulai: On the Concepts of Competence and Federal Order of Competences in the EU Legal Order
    Part I: The Reference to Federalism
    1: Olivier Beaud: The Allocation of Competences in a Federation
    2: Guillaume Tusseau: Theoretical Deflation: The EU Order of Competences and Power-Conferring Norms Theory
    Part II: The Allocation of Competences in EU Practice
    3: Marise Cremona: Allocation of Competences in the field of External Relations
    4: Roland Bieber: Allocation of Economic Policy Competences in the EU
    5: Giorgio Monti: Legislative and Executive Competences in Competition Law
    6: Hans-W. Micklitz: The Forgotten Dimension of Private Law
    Part. III: The ECJ and the Question of Competence
    7: Christiaan Timmermans: ECJ doctrines on Competences
    8: Lena Boucon: EU Law and Retained Powers of Member States
    9: Edouard Dubout: The Protection of Fundamental Rights and the Allocation of Competences in the EU: A Clash of Constitutional Logics
    Part. IV: Political and Legal Limits to EU Competences
    10: Robert Schütze: Limits to Union's "Internal Market" Competence(s): Constitutional Comparisons
    11: Xavier Groussot & Sanja Bogojevic: Subsidiarity as a Procedural Safeguard to Federalism
    12: François-Xavier Millet: The Respect for National Constitutional Identity in the European Legal Space: An Approach to Federalism as Constitutionalism

  • Loïc Azoulai holds the chair of European Law at the European University Institute. He is codirector of the Academy of European Law and of the Centre for Judicial Cooperation both hosted at the European University Institute. He is on leave from University of Panthéon-Assas Paris II where he is a Professor of Public Law. He has published on a wide range of questions related to European Union Law.

     

    Contributors: 
    Loïc Azoulai, European University Institute
    Olivier Beaud, Paris II Panthéon-Assas University
    Guillaume Tusseau, Sciences-po Paris
    Marise Cremona, European University Institute
    Roland Bieber, Lausanne University 
    Giorgio Monti, European University Institute
    Hans-W. Micklitz, European University Institute
    Christiaan Timmermans, Erasmus University Rotterdam
    Lena Boucon, European University Institute
    Edouard Dubout, Paris Est University
    Robert Schütze, Durham University
    Xavier Groussot, Sanja Bogojevic
    François-Xavier Millet, University of Toulouse- Capitole

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