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The path from single market to economic union is a continuing, and
controversial, story; raising questions about the present and
future regulation, structures, and purpose of economic union within
the broader objectives of the EU legal and political order. This
collection focuses on the evolution and regulation of the EU as an
economic union, in tribute to the scholarship of the late Professor
John A Usher. The process of treaty reform within the EU has now
reached fruition and attention is being re-focused on substantive
aspects of EU law and policy. The essays in the collection consider
the EU internal market in its broadest sense: the fundamental free
movement provisions remain at the core, but the concept of the
transnational market must also accommodate competing interests to
which the EU is committed but the implications of which can
nonetheless distort, and thus need to be carefully balanced within,
the basic free trade framework (for example, intellectual property
rights and the protection of innovation, and also the
implementation of social policy objectives). The collection also
situates the market in its broader politico-economic context. The
global economic climate remains precarious and questions about
optimal financial and fiscal regulation, and monetary stability,
remain critically significant, especially in a transnational
context given the degree of inter-dependency generated by the EU
integration project. The essays in the collection offer in-depth
reflections on different 'parts' of this evolving transnational
economic union, linked together as a whole by cross-cutting
thematic concerns about competence and regulation, and about where
and how the economic law of the EU fits within the broader
integration narrative. Together, these different elements of the
proposed collection demonstrate the different facets of EU economic
law and its regulation; and this approach, in turn, reflects the
extraordinary breadth of John Usher's remarkable contribution to
scholarship.
This work gives a practical overview of the legal aspects of the
Free Movement of Goods and the working of the Customs Union within
the European Union and their interpretation and application by the
Court of Justice of the European Communities. The essential purpose
of the free movement of goods and customs provisions of the EC
Treaty is to contribute to the establishment of a common market
that will ensure, among other things, free trade in goods between
member states. The free movement of goods is the primary pillar on
which the internal market within the European Community - the heart
of the EU - is based.
This book analyzes the operation of the customs union, with
detailed treatment of the Community Customs Code and its
implementing and associated measures. It also discusses the
elimination of customs duties and charges having equivalent effect,
and the elimination of quantitative restrictions and measures
having equivalent effect in trade between Member States. It
concludes with coverage of state monopolies of a commercial
character, and the nuclear common market.
It derives from a section in the looseleaf Law of the EU (Vaughan
& Robertson, eds), and is made available here for the benefit
of those who do not subscribe to the looseleaf.
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