Article 234 EC ensures that a divergent application of the EC
Treaty or of the statutes and acts of its institutions is not
allowed in any Member State. Unsurprisingly, its pivotal importance
has given rise to a huge number of ECJ judgments and orders - about
700 by the beginning of 2009. Very often, a practitioner needs to
establish whether the preliminary ruling procedure called for by
Article 234 EC is required in a particular case being pursued in a
national court, and any relevant ECJ ruling or order must be
located. Herein lies the great value of this book.
"Dr Barents"' very useful volume sorts paragraphs of the 700
judgments and orders by subject, making it easy to establish the
relevance of a particular Community court ruling to a particular
national court proceeding. In this book paragraphs of the judgments
and orders are presented in the form of extracts sorted by subject.
The subject headings are arranged according to a hierarchical
system, descending from such overarching concepts as scope and
participation to such precise categories as the following:
situations outside the scope of community law bodies not considered
to be courts or tribunals arbitration third persons rights of
participants formulation of preliminary questions presumption of
relevance of a preliminary reference violation of the obligation to
refer requirement of a pending dispute interim measures
modification of preliminary questions questions rejected by the
submitting court new elements presented during the preliminary
procedure questions lacking precision retroactive effects of
judgments
Paragraphs of judgments relating to more than one subject are
included under each relevant heading, where necessary accompanied
by cross references to other headings. Under each extract or
summary, the judgments and orders are referred to by case number in
ascending order. The articles of the EC Treaty are cited according
to the new method of citation pursuant to the renumbering of the
articles of that treaty brought about by the Treaty of
Amsterdam.
There is no doubt that the book's technique of presenting case
law in the form of separate extracts and summaries arranged by
topic and sub-topic improves the accessibility of the material.
This very practical, time-saving feature will be greatly
appreciated by practitioners throughout Europe. This is a reference
every European lawyer will want to have on hand.
General
Imprint: |
Kluwer Law International
|
Country of origin: |
Netherlands |
Series: |
European Mongraphs, v. 68 |
Release date: |
September 2009 |
Authors: |
Rene Barents
|
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
284 |
ISBN-13: |
978-90-411-3150-8 |
Categories: |
Books >
Law >
European Union (EU) law >
EU law reports
|
LSN: |
90-411-3150-7 |
Barcode: |
9789041131508 |
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