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Exploring the importance of the EU Services Directive (Directive
2006/123), this book provides an expansive insight into the
controversial legislation regulating the internal market in
services, whilst examining the challenges of positive
harmonisation. In addition, by analysing the functioning and
judicial interpretation of the directive, it considers EU trade
regulation values and the broader significance of EU regulation in
global regulatory standard setting. The book analyses the
directive's contribution to the fundamental freedoms and to the
completion of the internal market, with particular focus on the
remit of EU and national regulatory autonomy and general interests
protection in the context of positive harmonisation. Through the
lens of the directive, the study evaluates the status of EU
integration and appraises the resilience of the internal market
regulatory paradigm, including the interaction between primary and
secondary law and the effectiveness of administrative law
reinforcement, for the governance of the modern economy, as well as
exploring more broadly the import and international influence of EU
trade regulation. The book considers a variety of policy themes,
including the relationship between national autonomy and
supranational competence; the interaction of economic advancement
and related general interests, such as environmental and consumer
protection; market harmonisation techniques and enforcement
challenges, along with potential mechanisms for regulatory
enhancement. Discussing a central legal and economic framework for
the regulation of trade in services, from regulatory,
constitutional and policy perspectives, this book will be of
significant interest to students, academics, practitioners and
officials on European Union policy and law, as well as to anyone
interested more generally in business regulation in evolving
technological contexts, international trade law and comparative
market integration themes.
At times when so much attention is devoted to the constitutional
architecture of the European Union via Treaty amendments or
supplements in the aftermath of the Euro-crisis, the core business
of European market building through harmonization is all too often
neglected. It deserves strong recognition that Isidora Maletic
forcefully brings Art. 114 TFEU back to the agenda. Her competent
study provides new insights into the major competence rule which
still forms the back bone of European Integration. The constant
strive of the EU for embarking on non-trade policies against the
half-hearted resistance of the Member States deserves indeed a
major study, spelling out the details of the rather complex
article. Her comprehensive analysis detects the amazing potential
of Art. 114 TFEU as a tool to co-ordinate differences in the
understanding of what might be a "high level of protection" and it
allows for new ways of co-operation between the EU and the Member
States. This finding, which is backed through the analysis of the
ECJ case law and the notification procedure of Art. 114 TFEU fits
into the overall debate on constitutional pluralism which stays
away from a hierarchical understanding of the relationship between
the EU legal order and the Member States.' - Hans Micklitz,
European University Institute, Italy'This book is essential reading
for anyone seeking an up-to-date and critical understanding of the
success of the European Union's approach to market harmonisation.'
- Veerle Heyvaert, London School of Economics, UK This innovative
book explores the constitutional compromise between the European
Union's legislative competence and member states' regulatory
autonomy, and analyses the reconciliation of economic integration
and welfare protection within the European internal market. It does
so through the original lens of article 114 TFEU, the law-making
clause underlying the European harmonisation process. Focusing on a
critical provision and the controversial derogation mechanism
contained therein, the book discusses contemporary, universally
fundamental topics, such as risk assessment and related
responsibility allocation within the constraints of complex legal
frameworks, the preservation of regional regulatory autonomy
against the background of centralised legislative norms, and the
interaction of economic integration with policy interests like
consumer, environmental and health protection. Highlighting the
collaborative rather than adversarial value of national deviations
from common European measures, the study not only complements the
literature available on 'negative integration' of the internal
market, but also challenges traditionally accepted axioms,
revealing opportunities for risk prevention and legitimacy
enhancement stemming from diverse European and national regulatory
standards. This detailed book will be of wide international appeal
to academics, practitioners, students, judges, policy-makers and
officials working within the European Union and government
representatives of individual member states, as well as anyone more
generally interested in the dynamics of EU integration. Contents:
Foreword Introduction 1. The Harmonisation of the Internal Market
2. EU Competence in the Internal Market 3. Regulatory
Differentiation in the Internal Market 4. The Harmonisation Model
Under Article 114 TFEU in Practice 5. Appraisal and Reform
Proposals Bibliography Index
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