Convergence and Divergence in European Public Law
By (Author) Paul Beaumont
Edited by Carole Lyons
Edited by Neil Walker
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
7th June 2002
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
341.2422
Hardback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 22mm
This book grew out of a symposium held in the University of Aberdeen in May 2000. It examines the extent to which the European Union has brought about and should bring about convergence of law in Europe, in particular, but not exclusively, public law in Europe. Rather than focusing narrowly on the Intergovernmental Conference process, the book engages those who wish a detached and, at times, theoretical examination of the politics of institutional reform in the EU; of the legal techniques for accommodating diversity within the Union and the process of treaty making or constitution building in the EU; the cross-fertilization of administrative law concepts between the EU level and the national level; the need for and legitimacy of a European Union competence on human rights; and whether private law and public law differ in the extent to which they go to the heart of (reflect) national culture and therefore in the extent to which they are amenable to convergence.
this is a timely, interesting and well-organised collection of essays which on the whole are well written and very informative This book should be read by Community, public and comparative lawyers in order to acquire a good sense of the animated and important debate about the direction of our law and laws in the Europe of the future. -- Patrick Birkinshaw, University of Hull * Law Quarterly Review *
Paul Beaumont is Professor of European Union and Private International Law at the University of Aberdeen. Carole Lyons is a Lecturer in Law at the University of Aberdeen. Neil Walker is Professor of European Law at the EUI Florence.