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Sommario
1. Introduction: Why Revisit Cassis de Dijon?
Albertina Albors-Llorens, University of Cambridge, UK, Catherine Barnard, University of Cambridge, UK and Brigitte Leucht, University of Portsmouth, UK
PART I
THE MAKING OF A LANDMARK DECISION
2. From Dassonville to Cassis: The Revolution That Did Not Take Place
Robert Schütze, Durham University, UK
3. The Missing Ingredient in Cassis de Dijon: An Exercise in Legal Archaeology
Catherine Barnard, University of Cambridge, UK
4. The Cassis de Dijon Judgment and the European Commission
Brigitte Leucht, University of Portsmouth, UK
PART II
THE IMPACT OF A LANDMARK DECISION
5. ‘Ceci n’est pas … Cassis de Dijon’: Some Reflections on its Triple Regulatory Impact
Inge Govaere, Ghent University, Belgium
6. Did Cassis de Dijon Make a Difference?
Stephen Weatherill, Oxford University, UK
7. EU Competition Law and the Legacy of Cassis de Dijon
Albertina Albors-Llorens, University of Cambridge, UK
8. Mutual Recognition: Addressing Some Outstanding Conundrums
Peter Oliver, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
9. Mutual Recognition and EFTA
Georges Baur, Liechtenstein-Institut, Bendern/Liechtenstein
10. Negotiating Mutual Recognition Agreements: Challenges and Techniques
Emilija Leinarte, University of Cambridge, UK and Catherine Barnard, University of Cambridge, UK
PART III
CASSIS DE DIJON IN THE LANDSCAPE OF EUROPEAN LEGAL AND MARKET INTEGRATION
11. Big Decisions in European Legal and Economic Integration: What have We Learned?
Karen J Alter, Northwestern University, USA
Info autore
Albertina Albors-Llorens is Professor of EU Law, Fellow of St John's College and Member of the Centre for European Legal Studies at the Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge.
Photograph courtesy of University of Cambridge.
Catherine Barnard is Professor of EU Law and Labour Law, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Trinity College, UK.Brigitte Leucht is Reader in International History and Politics at University of Portsmouth, UK. She is the editor, along with Catherine Barnard and Albertina Albors-Llorens of Cassis de Dijon: 40 Years On (2021), and with Wolfram Kaiser and Morten Rasmussen, of The History of the European Union: Origins of a Trans- and Supranational Polity 1950-72 (2009).