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This book addresses and highlights the core issues concerning
general principles of EU law and their relationship with and impact
on private law. With the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty, the
EU Charter of Fundamental Rights became a legally binding source of
primary law and highlights, together with the General Principles of
EU law, the importance of fundamental rights in the legal system of
the Union. This increased visibility means that private parties
have begun to rely on fundamental rights arguments in proceedings
in front of national courts and Union courts more and more often.
Amongst many other issues this development brings important
questions relating to the effects of EU fundamental rights on
private law to the forefront. After an introductory chapter by the
editors the following four overarching themes provide the structure
of this book and broadly reflect the approaches discussed in its
eighteen essays:; the methodology and theory in the elaboration of
new General Principles of EU law; the Constitutionalization of
private autonomy in EU law; issues of horizontal direct effect
viewed from conceptual, sectoral and remedial perspectives; and the
relationship between General Principles and competition law. This
book reflects the continuous relevance and the need to re-examine
the effects and the status of General Principles of EU law, which
have been dealt with already twice before (in 1999 and 2007) by the
group that has compiled the present volume,the Swedish Network for
European Legal Studies. The discussion that emerges is, here as
before, of immense significance both for theoretical legal studies
and for legal practice. The eighteen essays here printed are all
final author-edited versions of papers first presented at the
Network's conference in Stockholm in November 2012. The authors
include both eminent, well-known experts, and representatives of a
new generation of younger scholars in the field.
This open access book takes the current state of the Union
seriously. The European Union is at a crossroads. Slowly recovering
from a series of financial and economic crises, with trust
fundamentally shaken by processes of disaggregation and
increasingly nationalist politics, it is searching for new visions
that are at once inspiring and workable. In its White Paper of 1
March 2017, the Commission proposed five non-exclusive options for
the Future of Europe. As put by the Commission, the five scenarios
are illustrative in nature to provoke thinking. They are not
detailed blueprints or policy prescriptions. Likewise, they
deliberately make no mention of legal or institutional processes -
the form will follow the function. This book aims to debate not
only the political vision of Europe, but also the issue of legal
integration beyond Brexit. Apart from addressing the institutional
challenges for the EU, the contributions to this volume focus on
two key areas: rule of law and security. Rule of law and security
are not only paradigmatic for the future of Europe but are also
closely connected to a particular vision of Europe based on
'integration through law'; a vision that has been strongly
contested in recent years. The overarching question is: how can
sustainable political and legal integration be achieved in Europe?
The volume builds on a conference organised by the Swedish Network
for European Legal Studies in November 2017 and includes chapters
by leading scholars in the field from the Nordic countries and
wider Europe. The eBook editions of this book are available open
access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on
bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the Swedish
Studies Network.
This open access book takes the current state of the Union
seriously. The European Union is at a crossroads. Slowly recovering
from a series of financial and economic crises, with trust
fundamentally shaken by processes of disaggregation and
increasingly nationalist politics, it is searching for new visions
that are at once inspiring and workable. In its White Paper of 1
March 2017, the Commission proposed five non-exclusive options for
the Future of Europe. As put by the Commission, the five scenarios
are illustrative in nature to provoke thinking. They are not
detailed blueprints or policy prescriptions. Likewise, they
deliberately make no mention of legal or institutional processes -
the form will follow the function. This book aims to debate not
only the political vision of Europe, but also the issue of legal
integration beyond Brexit. Apart from addressing the institutional
challenges for the EU, the contributions to this volume focus on
two key areas: rule of law and security. Rule of law and security
are not only paradigmatic for the future of Europe but are also
closely connected to a particular vision of Europe based on
'integration through law'; a vision that has been strongly
contested in recent years. The overarching question is: how can
sustainable political and legal integration be achieved in Europe?
The volume builds on a conference organised by the Swedish Network
for European Legal Studies in November 2017 and includes chapters
by leading scholars in the field from the Nordic countries and
wider Europe. The eBook editions of this book are available open
access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on
bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the Swedish
Studies Network.
The EU public procurement regime has recently undergone an overhaul
and now allows Member States and their contracting authorities to
pursue strategic goals via public procurement, including
environmental and social objectives. The extent to which such
interests may be accommodated in the procurement process is
ultimately determined by the broader legal context in which the EU
public procurement regime exists, which raises pressing questions
regarding the scope and limits of Member States' discretion. This
volume scrutinises these new legal acts - particularly Directive
2014/24/EU - focusing on discretion and engaging with questions
central to the public procurement regime against the EU legal
backdrop, including internal market law and environment law, as
well as law beyond the EU.
The EU public procurement regime has recently undergone an overhaul
and now allows Member States and their contracting authorities to
pursue strategic goals via public procurement, including
environmental and social objectives. The extent to which such
interests may be accommodated in the procurement process is
ultimately determined by the broader legal context in which the EU
public procurement regime exists, which raises pressing questions
regarding the scope and limits of Member States' discretion. This
volume scrutinises these new legal acts - particularly Directive
2014/24/EU - focusing on discretion and engaging with questions
central to the public procurement regime against the EU legal
backdrop, including internal market law and environment law, as
well as law beyond the EU.
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