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008 130514s2024 -uk ||||r|||||||1|||eng d
020 _a978-0-19-891552-2
040 _aES-MaCNC
_cES-MaCNC
100 1 _aCraig, Paul
_96064
245 1 0 _aEU Law: text, cases and materials (8th edition)
250 _a8ª Ed.
260 _aLondon
_bOxford University Press
_c2024
300 _a1222 p.
336 _2isbdcontent
_aTexto (visual)
337 _2isbdmedia
_asin mediación
520 _aThe eighth edition of EU Law: Text, Cases, and Materials provides clear analysis of all aspects of European law in the post Lisbon era. This edition looks in detail at the way in which the provisions of the Lisbon Treaty have worked since the Treaty became operational, especially innovations such as the hierarchy of norms, the different types of competence, and the legally binding Charter of Rights. The coming into effect of the new Treaty was overshadowed by the financial crisis, which has occupied a considerable part of the EU’s time since 2009. The EU has also had to cope with the refugee crisis, the pandemic crisis, the rule of law crisis, and the Brexit crisis. There has nonetheless been considerable legislative activity in other areas, and the EU Courts have given important decisions across the spectrum of EU law. The eighth edition has incorporated the changes in all these areas. The book covers all topics relating to the institutional and constitutional dimensions of the EU. In relation to EU substantive law, there is detailed treatment of the four freedoms, the single market, competition, equal treatment, citizenship, state aid, and the area of freedom, security, and justice. Brexit is the rationale for the decision to have a separate UK version of the book. There is no difference in the chapters between the two versions, insofar as the explication of the EU law is concerned. The difference resides in the fact that in the UK version there is an extra short section at the end of each chapter explaining how, for example, direct effect, primacy, or free movement are relevant in post-Brexit UK. Law students in the UK need to know this, law students in the EU and elsewhere do not. <br><br> <b>TABLE OF CONTENTS</b> <br><br> 1:The development of European integration <br> 2:Membership: Entry, Obligations and Exit <br> 3:The Tnstitutions <br> 4:Competence <br> 5:Instruments and the Hierarchy of Norms <br> 6:Legislation and Decision-making <br> 7:Legislation, Decision-making and Democracy <br> 8:The Nature and Effect of EU law: Direct Effect and Beyond <br> 9:The Application of EU law: Remedies in National Courts <br> 10:The Relationship between EU law and National Law: Primacy <br> 11:EU International Relations Law <br> 12:Human Rights in the EU <br> 13:Enforcement Action against Member States <br> 14:Preliminary Rulings <br> 15:Review of Legality: Access <br> 16:Review of Legality: Grounds of Review <br> 17:Damages Actions and Money Claims <br> 18:The Single Market <br> 19:Free Movement of Goods: Duties, Charges, and Taxes <br> 20:Free Movement of Goods: Quantitative Restrictions <br> 21:Free movement of Capital <br> 22:Free movement of Workers <br> 23:Freedom of Establishment and to Provide Services <br> 24:Citizenship of the European Union <br> 25:Equal Treatment and Non-Discrimination: On the Grounds of Sex, Race, Disability, Religion or Belief and Age <br> 26:Economic and Monetary Union <br> 27:AFSJ: EU Criminal Law <br> 28:Competition law: Article 101 <br> 29:Competition law: Article 102 <br> 30:Competition law: Mergers <br> 31:The State and the Common Market
650 4 _9332
_aDerecho
653 0 _aDerecho de la competencia
653 0 _aRelaciones internacionales
653 0 _aDerechos humanos
653 0 _aUnión económica y monetaria europea
653 0 _aDerecho comunitario
653 0 _aInstituciones europeas
653 0 _aLibre circulación de capitales
653 0 _aLibre circulación de bienes y personas
653 0 _aIntegración económica regional
653 0 _aJurisprudencia
700 1 _aBurca, Grainne de
_96065
856 4 1 _zVer índice
942 _cMAN
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