Fr. 470.00

Eu Energy Law

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

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Zusatztext The book is an important contribution to the field making accessible in a single work a very demanding and complex area of legal practice. The authors bring to this book extensive academic and practical experience and successfully introduce the reader to the legal, political and economic underpinnings of European energy law and policy. The book will no doubt prove invaluable to all those involved in the energy market. Informationen zum Autor Angus Johnston is a CUF Lecturer and a Fellow in Law at University College, Oxford. Between 1997-8, he was a Lecturer at the Institute for Anglo-American Law at the University of Leiden. He was a Fellow and Director of Studies in Law at Trinity Hall, Cambridge from 1999 and University Lecturer from 2004 and then Senior Lecturer at Cambridge University from 2008 until his appointment in Oxford in 2010. He has been a visitor to Harvard Law School and the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg. He is also an affiliated lecturer at Cambridge University and at the Jacobs University, Bremen.Dr Guy Block is Head of the Energy and Transport Law Department at Janson Baugniet in Brussels. He has more than 25 years of experience in the energy sector. He acts frequently before Belgian civil and administrative courts, Arbitration instiutions, European Court of Justice, and European Court of Human Rights. He is a national and international arbitrator. Klappentext A comprehensive discussion of EU energy law, this work covers key issues such as environmental and contractual matters, and the role of regulatory authorities. It derives from a section in the looseleaf Law of the EU (Vaughan & Robertson, eds), and is made available here for the benefit of those who do not subscribe to the looseleaf. Zusammenfassung A comprehensive discussion of EU energy law, this work covers key issues such as environmental and contractual matters, and the role of regulatory authorities. It derives from a section in the looseleaf Law of the EU (Vaughan & Robertson, eds), and is made available here for the benefit of those who do not subscribe to the looseleaf....

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