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The Coherence of EU Free Movement Law - Constitutional Responsibility and the Court of Justice (Hardcover)
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The Coherence of EU Free Movement Law - Constitutional Responsibility and the Court of Justice (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in European Law
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At the heart of the European Union is the establishment of a
European market grounded in the free movement of people, goods,
services, and capital. The implementation of the free market has
preoccupied European lawyers since the inception of the Union's
predecessors. Throughout the Union's development, as obstacles to
free movement have been challenged in the courts, the European
Court of Justice has had to expand on the internal market
provisions in the founding Treaties to create a body of law
determining the scope and meaning of the EU protection of free
movement. In doing so, the Court has often taken differing
approaches across the different freedoms, leaving a body of law
apparently lacking a coherent set of foundational principles. This
book presents a critical analysis of the European Courts'
jurisprudence on free movement, examining the Court's
constitutional responsibility to articulate a coherent vision of
the EU internal market. Through analysis of restrictions on free
movement rights, it argues that four main drivers are distorting
the system of the case law and its claims to coherence. The drivers
reflect 'good' impulses (the protection of fundamental rights);
avoidable habits (the proliferation of principles and conflicting
lines of case law authority); inherent ambiguities (the unsettled
purpose and objectives of the internal market); and broader
systemic conditions (the structure of the Court and its
decision-making processes). These dynamics cause problematic
instances of case law fragmentation - which has substantive
implications for citizens, businesses, and Member States
participating in the internal market as well as reputational
consequences for the Court of Justice and for the EU more
generally. However, ultimately the Member States must take greater
responsibility too: only they can ensure that the Court of Justice
is properly structured and supported, enabling it to play its
critical institutional part in the complex narrative of EU
integration. Examining the judicial development of principles that
define the scope of EU free movement law, this book argues that
sustaining case law coherence is a vital constitutional
responsibility of the Court of Justice. The idea of constitutional
responsibility draws from the nature of the duties that a higher
court owes to a constitutional text and to constitutional subjects.
It is based on values of fairness, integrity, and imagination. A
paradigm of case law coherence is less rigid, and therefore more
realistic, than a benchmark of legal certainty. But it still takes
seriously the Court's obligations as a high-level judicial
institution bound by the rule of law. Judges can legitimately be
expected - and obliged - to be aware of the public legal resource
that they construct through the evolution of case law.
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