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Zusatztext This work offers deep and exciting insights into the sometimes considerably different application of the GRC in the Member States and can therefore be recommended without reservation to anyone interested in the topic. Informationen zum Autor Michal Bobek is Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union. Jeremias Adams-Prassl is Professor of Law at Magdalen College, University of Oxford, UK, and Deputy Director of the Institute of European and Comparative Law, UK. Vorwort This book is a significant examination of how the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights is implemented across member states by leading experts. Zusammenfassung Ten years after the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union became part of binding primary law, and twenty years since its adoption, this volume assess the application of the EU Charter in the Member States. How often, and in particular by which actors, is the EU Charter invoked at the national level? In what type of situations is it used? Has the approach of national courts in general, and of constitutional courts in particular, to EU law to EU fundamental rights law changed following the entry into force of the Charter? What sort of interplay does the Charter generate with the national bill of rights and the European Convention? Is the life with the Charter on the national level a harmonious 'praktische Konkordanz' or rather a messy 'ménage à trois'? These and other questions are discussed in the four parts that form the book. Part I is dedicated to the normative foundations. Part II sets out Member States’ Perspectives, providing a structured, in-depth account of the Charter’s operation in 16 different Member States. Part III provides a detailed evaluation of selected rights contained within the Charter. Part IV synthesises the materials presented up to that point to develop a series of broader perspectives, looking to discover underlying lessons about the relationship between EU fundamental rights law and national legal systems. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Jeremias Adams-Prassl and Michal BobekPART ITHE FOUNDATIONS1. The Role of the EU Charter in the Member States Koen Lenaerts2. The EU Charter Ten Years On: A View from Strasbourg Siofra O’Leary PART IIMEMBER STATE PERSPECTIVES3. Austria: United in Consistent Interpretation Christoph Grabenwarter and Christine Pesendorfer4. Belgium: The EU Charter in a Tradition of Openness Sarah Lambrecht5. Bulgaria: Rays of Light in a Cloudy Sky 9 Alexander Kornezov6. Czech Republic and Slovakia: Another International Human Rights Treaty? Adam Blisa, Pavel Molek and Katarina Šipulova7. The EU Charter before the French Parliament and Courts: Between (Great) Disillusion and (Little) Hope Laurence Burgorgue-Larsen8. Taking Up the European Mandate: The Charter Before German Courts Mattias Wendel9. Hungary: A Half-Hearted Look at the Charter Antal Berkes, Andras Jakab and Pal Sonnevend10. Ireland and the Charter: Ten Underwhelming Years? Gerard Hogan11. Italy: New Frontiers and Further Developments Silvana Sciarra and Angelo Jr Golia12. The Netherlands: The New Kid on the Block, Growing Pains or Growing Gains? Corinna Wissels and Aniel Pahladsingh13. Poland – The Charter of Fundamental Rights as a Last Resort? Krystyna Kowalik-Banczyk14. Portugal: Lukewarm Engagement with the Charter Goncalo de Almeida Ribeiro and Patricia Fragoso Martins15. Trials, Tributes and Tribulations: The EU Charter before the Slovenian Courts Matej Accetto16. The (Incomplete) Reception of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights in Spain Daniel Sarmiento and Xavier Codina17. Limited But Not Inconsequential: The Application of the Charter by the Courts of England and Wales Lady Arden and Takis Tridimas PART IIISELECTED RIGHTS18. Article 8:...