Now in its 28th year, the Yearbook of European Law is one of the most highly respected periodicals in the field. Featuring extended essays from leading scholars and practitioners, the Yearbook has become essential reading for all involved in European legal research and practice. INDICE: ARTICLES; 1: Hans-W. Micklitz: The Visible Hand of European Regulatory Private Law - The Transformation of European Private Law from Autonomyto Functionalism in Competition and Regulation; 2: Leone Niglia: Beyond Enchantment-The Possibility of a New European Private Law; 3: Nicola Countouris: European Social Law as an Autonomous Legal Discipline; 4: Christiana HJI Panayi:Corporate Mobility in Private International Law and European Community Law: Debunking Some Myths; 5: Benjamin Geva: The EU Payment Services Directive: An Outsider's View; 6: Takis Tridimas: Community Agencies, Competition Law and ECSB Initiatives on Securities Clearing and Settlement; 7: Chiara Mosca: The Takeover Bids Directive: An Opportunity for Europe or simply a Compromise?; 8: Robert Schütze: Reforming the 'CAP': From <'Vertical>' to <'Horizontal>' Harmonisation; 9: Morten Broberg: The preliminary reference procedure and questions ofinternational and national law; 10: Jill Wakefield: Retrench and Reform: the Action for Damages; 11: Alexandros Tsadiras: Of Celestial Motions And Gravitational Attractions: The Institutional Symbiosis Between The European Ombudsman And The European Parliament; 12: Lee Faircloth Peoples: The Influence of Foreign Law Cited in Advocates General's Opinions on the Law of the European Communities; 13: Merris Amos: The principle of comity and the relationship between British courts and the European Court of Human Rights; SYMPOSIUM ON THE KADI JUDGEMENT; 14: Sara Poli and Maria Tzanou: The Kadi Rulings: a Survey of the Literature; 15: Marise Cremona: EC Competence, 'Smart Sanctions' and the Kadi Case; 16: Enzo Cannizzaro: Security Council Resolutions and EC Fundamental Rights: Some Remarks on the ECJ Decision in the Kadi Case; 17: Annalisa Ciampi: The potentially competing jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice; 18: Giorgio Gaja: Are the Effects of the UN Charter Under EC Law Governed by Article 307 of the EC Treaty?; 19: Nikolaos Lavranos: The impact of the Kadi-judgment on the international obligations of the EC Member States and the EC; 20: Riccardo Pavoni: Freedom to Choose the Legal Means for Implementing UN Security Council Resolutions and the ECJ Kadi Judgment: A Misplaced Argument Hindering the Enforcement of International Law in the EC; 21: Martin Scheinin: Is the ECJ ruling in Kadi incompatible with international law?; 22: Christian Tomuschat: The Kadi case: What relationship between the universal legal order under the auspices of the United Nations and the EU legal order?; 23: Federico Fabbrini: The Role Of The Judiciary In Times Of Emergency: Judicial Review Of Counter-Terrorism Measures In The United States Supreme Court And The European Court Of Justice; BOOK REVIEWS
- ISBN: 978-0-19-957125-3
- Editorial: Oxford University
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 784
- Fecha Publicación: 04/03/2010
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés