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A commonly expressed view is that the citizens and the Member
States are destined to be overcome by the European Union. There is
a sense that the Union of today is not what was intended to be
created or acceded to by the Member States or its citizens. The
Outer Limits of European Union Law brings together a diverse group
of legal scholars to consider aspects of EU substantive,
constitutional and procedural law in a manner highlighting the many
senses in which the European Union is or can be limited and so
demonstrating that the fear of being overcome is largely a false
fear. By exploring the mechanisms and devices used to limit the
European Union, the contributors also reveal not only the strengths
of the various limits, but also and more crucially the weakness of
the limits , thereby demonstrating that the prospect of being
overcome may be a genuine risk to be guarded against. By
considering general themes (eg legitimacy) and core subject areas
(eg policing, free movement of goods, remedies) the book reveals
the various techniques used by the Court of Justice, Community
institutions and Member States to define and modify the outer
limits of the European Union and European Union Law.
This monograph addresses two problems surrounding the
interpretation and application of Article 81 of the EC Treaty -
what is competition and how does Article 81 ensure that competition
is protected. After over 40 years of application and a period of
modernisation, decentralisation, and reflection, it is possible to
understand Article 81 and what it seeks to achieve. The monograph's
aim is to reveal the intellectual order and rational structure
underlying the law so as to enable the reader to understand Article
81 in a clear and rigorous manner. This is done by breaking Article
81 down into its constituent elements and examining the function
that each element serves. Arguing that jurisdiction rests on a
public/private distinction, both the substantive and the
justificatory rules are cast to generate obligations appropriate
for private actors to perform. Actors and activities falling within
the scope of Article 81 are subject to the substantive element
prohibiting contrived reductions in output. Since output reduction
can co-exist with cost reduction/innovation, and that these latter
features are desirable, cost reduction and innovation operate to
justify infringement of the substantive obligation. Thus this
monograph argues that output, cost and innovation are the only
legitimate issues in an Article 81 analysis. It is in this sense
that the monograph is concerned with the boundaries of Article 81
EC.
This volume assesses the viability of various theories of economic
integration that take into account the legal, economic, political
and social challenges of incorporating free trade with retaining
the plurality of social welfare standards and consumer protection.
Chapters cover the governance of trade in services at the European
and global level; studies on the recent Services Directive and how
this interacts with the principle of managed mutual recognition and
harmonization in different sectors of trade in services (social
services, financial services); the recent case law of the European
Courts on the enforcement of the principle of free movement of
services and how this accommodates various national public interest
concerns; and the interaction of the freedom to provide services
with fundamental rights, including social rights. The operation of
the principle of managed mutual recognition in other economic
integration regimes, in particular in the context of the WTO, is
also discussed.
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