Fr. 226.00

Eu Law After Lisbon

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext [A] highly thoughtful, analytical, critical, tightly written, and well-edited collage of chapters and important contribution to European integration scholarship. As such it is highly recommended to all legal scholars who are already specialised in EU law, and who desire to enrich their (thematic) knowledge and enhance their insights pertaining to the multifaceted EU legal persona. Informationen zum Autor Andrea Biondi is Professor of European Union Law and the Co-Director of the Centre of European Law at King's College London. Prof. Biondi is also visiting professor at the College of Europe in Warsaw, Universidade Catolica of Lisbon and at Georgetown University. He is a member of the Bar of Florence as well as being an Academic Member of Francis Taylor Building Chambers in London. Piet Eeckhout is Professor of European Law and Director of the Centre of European Law at King's College London. He is editor, with Prof T Tridimas, of the Yearbook of European Law; and, with David Anderson QC, of the Oxford EU Law Library (both Oxford University Press). He is an associate academic member of Matrix Chambers. Klappentext The implementation of the Lisbon Treaty is profoundly changing many areas of EU law and policy. This volume gathers leading specialists in the field to analyse the implementation process and the directions of legal reform post-Lisbon, situating the Lisbon reforms in the broader context of on-going policy programmes. Zusammenfassung The implementation of the Lisbon Treaty is profoundly changing many areas of EU law and policy. This volume gathers leading specialists in the field to analyse the implementation process and the directions of legal reform post-Lisbon, situating the Lisbon reforms in the broader context of on-going policy programmes. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface I: CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK 1: Paul Berman: From Laeken to Lisbon: The Origins and Negotiation of the Lisbon Treaty 2: Marise Cremona: The Two (or Three) Treaty Solution: The New Treaty Structure of the EU 3: Alexander H Türk: Lawmaking after Lisbon 4: Lucia Serena Rossi: Does the Lisbon Treaty Provide a Clearer Separation of Competences between EU and Member States? 5: Bruno De Witte Witte: Treaty Revision Procedures after Lisbon 6: Allan F Tatham: 'Don't mention divorce at the wedding, darling!': EU Accession and Withdrawal after Lisbon 7: David Anderson and Cian C Murphy: The Charter of Fundamental Rights 8: Giorgio Gaja: Accession to the ECHR II: INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK 9: Francis G Jacobs: The Lisbon Treaty and the Court of Justice 10: Andrea Biondi: Subsidiarity in the Courtroom 11: Thomas Christiansen: The European Union after the Lisbon Treaty: An Elusive 'Institutional Balance'? 12: Richard Corbett: The Evolving Roles of the European Parliament and of National Parliaments III: EXTERNAL RELATIONS 13: Piet Eeckhout: The EU's Common Foreign and Security Policy after Lisbon: From Pillar Talk to Constitutionalism 14: Markus Krajewski: The Reform of the Common Commercial Policy 15: Piet Eeckhout and Federico Ortino: owards an EU Policy on Foreign Direct Investment IV: EU POLICIES 16: Ester Herlin- Karnell: EU Competence in Criminal Law after Lisbon 17: José Luis Buendia Sierra: Writing straight with crooked lines: Competition Policy and Services of General Economic Interest in the Treaty of Lisbon 18: Leigh Hancher and Francesco Maria Salerno: Energy Policy after Lisbon 19: Stephen Weatherill: EU Sports Law: The Effect of the Lisbon Treaty ...

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