New Directions in European Public Law
By (Author) Jack Beatson
By (author) Professor Professor Paul Matthews
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
1st January 1998
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International institutions
352.0094
Hardback
216
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 17mm
This collection of essays arises from two symposia held at the University of Cambridge, Centre for European Legal Studies, in the spring and summer of 1997. It presents an analysis of issues arising from the EU public law arena, but falls into two interrelated but distinct parts. The first part deals with issues of liability in public law and the availability of remedies in EC and domestic law, including: member state liability in damages; the role of Article 215; the Community system of remedies; the domestic liability of public authorities in damages; and tortious liability in EC law. The second part deals with EU public law more broadly, by examining the phenomenon of cross-fertilization among national legal systems in Europe and between national systems and EU law. The essays in this section include: the cross-fertilization of concepts in constitutional law; cross-fertilization in EU administrative law; transplantation and cross-fertilization; constitutions and judicial power; and cross-fertilization in Italian administrative law.
this book provides a combination of interesting perspectives in European public law. It leads the way to further comparative legal research into the evolving system of national remedies for the breaches of Community law. -- Martina Kunnecke * European Public Law *
The book is an important work not only because of its detailed analysis of the existing case law relating to State liability but also in identifying possible future developments in this field. -- Paul Hughes * European Law Review *
Sir Jack Beatson is a High Court judge, having previously been the Rouse Ball Professor of English Law in the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. 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.