Available Formats
European Union Law for the Twenty-First Century: Volume 1: Rethinking the New Legal Order
By (Author) Takis Tridimas
Edited by Paolisa Nebbia
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
28th September 2004
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
341.2422
Hardback
496
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 39mm
This book, to be published in two volumes, is based on the contributions made to the W.G. Hart Workshop 2003. It contains more than forty contributions by leading experts seeking to assess the state of development of EU law some fifty years after the establishment of the Communities and contribute to the current debate on the European Constitution. The first volume concentrates on the theme of European Constitutionalism and analyses the proposed Constitution dealing, among others, with the division of competence between the EU and the Member States, Community legislation, the role of the national parliaments, democracy in the EU, and the Court of Justice. The second volume focuses on challenges in the field of the internal market and external relations, looking at diverse areas of European law, including free movement, competition law and merger control, public procurement, consumer law, enlargement, WTO, third country nationals, sex equality etc.
...anyone interested in the evolution of EC and EU law will benefit greatly from these two volumes, which capture many of the major debates in European law at one particular point in time. -- A.M. McDonnell * Common Market Law Review *
Takis Tridimas is the Sir John Lubbock Professor of Banking Law and the Head of the International Financial Law Unit of the Centre for Commercial Law Studies, Queen Mary, University of London. Paolisa Nebbia is a Fellow and Tutor in Law of St. Hilda's College, Oxford.