
An Introduction to EU Constitutional Law
An Introduction
Hart Publishing
1st Edition
Published on 23. November 2010
Book
Paperback/Softback
292 pages
978-1-84113-917-3 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
This innovative book is based on the premise that the absence of a single constitutional document for the European Union does not imply the absence of a constitution. Rather, the EU constitution, composed of a myriad of legal texts, case law and practice, is a moving target subject to continuous change and comprises several layers of integration with varying geographical scope.The book endeavours to make sense of this highly complex constitutional order by focusing on what the authors perceive to be the essential features of the system, taking into account the profound changes which have taken place over the past 20 years. The EU has become much more than an internal economic market and has recently been active even in areas such as immigration and third-country nationals, security and defence policy and penal law and procedure.Rather than casting the reader adrift in a sea of institutional and procedural detail, the authors underline the essential values, principles and objectives of the integration regime as well as its basic normative structure and hierarchy. In this context, the decentralised nature of the EU is highlighted as an integral part of its constitutional make-up.
Recurring themes running through the book include European citizenship as well as fundamental rights and the rule of law. And, while stressing the basic values, principles and objectives of the EU, the book also confronts head-on the problems and challenges facing the Union and the gap which is often perceived between lofty ideals and harsh realities.The book will be particularly useful to students of EU law and European integration but will also appeal to a broader audience of researchers and practitioners, including political scientists.The book reflects the reforms implemented by the Lisbon Treaty, which entered into force on 1 December 2009.
Recurring themes running through the book include European citizenship as well as fundamental rights and the rule of law. And, while stressing the basic values, principles and objectives of the EU, the book also confronts head-on the problems and challenges facing the Union and the gap which is often perceived between lofty ideals and harsh realities.The book will be particularly useful to students of EU law and European integration but will also appeal to a broader audience of researchers and practitioners, including political scientists.The book reflects the reforms implemented by the Lisbon Treaty, which entered into force on 1 December 2009.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Weight
430 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84113-917-3 (9781841139173)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

Book
08/2012
2nd Edition
Hart Publishing
€49.70
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Persons
Allan Rosas has been a judge at the European Court of Justice since January 2002, having formerly been Principal Legal Adviser and later Deputy Director-General of the Legal Service of the European Commission.Lorna Armati has been a Member of the Legal Service of the European Commission since September 2010, having formerly been Legal Secretary to Judge Rosas and later Legal Officer at the EFTA Surveillance Authority.
Content
1 What Constitution? A Rose by Any Other Name 2 An Elephant That Cannot Be Defi ned? What the EU Is, and Is Not 3 Who Is the Boss? In Search of a Master of the Treaties 4 Looking Past the Trees to See the Wood: Construing a Hierarchy of Norms 5 Into the Estuaries and up the Rivers: Union Law in the National Legal Orders of the Member States 6 A Lot More than Brussels Bureaucrats: The Institutional Framework 7 A Suprematist Composition? Differentiation and Flexibility 8 What Defi cit? The EU System of Democracy 9 Civis Europeus Sum: The Evolving Concept of Union Citizenship 10 Taking Rights More Seriously? The EU System of Fundamental Rights 11 Broadening Horizons? The Area of Freedom, Security and Justice 12 The Internal Market: Liberal, Social or Green? 13 An Elephant Trumpeting Loud and Clear or a Gaggle of Geese? EU External Relations 14 Covenants of No Strength to Secure A Man At All? Issues of Enforcement and Control 15 The Elephant in the Room? Concluding Remarks