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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-016.mrc:159625031:12346
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-016.mrc:159625031:12346?format=raw

LEADER: 12346cam a2200385Ia 4500
001 7923700
005 20221201044434.0
008 100427t20102010txu b 001 0 eng d
020 $a9041131523 (acid-free paper)
020 $a9789041131522 (acid-free paper)
035 $a(OCoLC)ocn609810843
035 $a(OCoLC)609810843
035 $a(NNC)7923700
035 $a7923700
040 $aYDXCP$cYDXCP$dZYF$dYLS$dXND$dOHX$dBWX$dCDX$dOrLoB-B
043 $ae------
050 4 $aKJE947$b.E975 2010
082 04 $a341.424
245 00 $aEuropean Union legal order after Lisbon /$cedited by Patrick Birkinshaw, Mike Varney.
260 $aAustin :$bWolters Kluwer Law & Business ;$aAlphen Aan Den Rijn :$bWolters Kluwer ;$aFrederick, MD :$bSold and distributed in North, Central and South America by Aspen Publishers,$c[2010], ©2010.
300 $axxv, 366 pages ;$c25 cm.
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
490 1 $aEuropean monographs ;$v70
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 325-347) and index.
505 00 $gPART I.$tThe Future of the European Union Legal and Political Order -- $gChapter 1.$tThe Future of the European Public Law /$rProf. Dr Jurgen Schwarze -- $g1.$tIntroduction: From National to European Public Law -- $g2.$tElements, Structure, and Frame of European Public Law -- $g3.$tSurvey of Recent Developments -- $g3.1.$tGermany -- $g3.2.$tFrance -- $g3.3.$tUnited Kingdom -- $g3.4.$tSouthern European Countries -- $g3.5.$tCentral and Eastern European Countries -- $g3.6.$tEurope -- $g4.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 2.$tThe Future of the European Order /$rJohn Erik Fossum -- $g1.$tIntroduction -- $g2.$tPossible Paths to a European Future of Democracy -- $g2.1.$tA Europe of Nation-States -- $g2.1.1.$tAssessment: Is This the Path to Europes̀ Future Democratic Order? -- $g2.2.$tA Federal Europe -- $g2.2.1.$tAssessment: Is This the Path to Europes̀ Future Democratic Order? -- $g2.3.$tRegional-European Democracy -- $g2.3.1.$tAssessment: Is This the Path to Europes̀ Future Democratic Order? -- $g3.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 3.$tThe EU and Global Administrative Law /$rJean-Bernard Auby -- $g1.$tEU and Globalization -- $g1.1.$tRegional Integration -- $g1.2.$tAll Previously Mentioned Phenomena Have Their Echo in Law -- $g2.$tThe G̀AL' Theory and Its Possible Application to European Institutions -- $g2.1.$tWhat Is That Which Is Now Rather Well Known as the G̀AL' Theory? -- $g2.2.$tIs the G̀AL' Theory Applicable to the Functioning of the EU and to the EU Institutions? -- $g3.$tSome Pieces to be Added -- $g3.1.$tGlobalization Creates Interconnections, between Political and Legal Spaces, Both Horizontally and Vertically -- $g3.2.$tThe Democratic and Constitutional Background -- $gChapter 4.$tGovernance and Constitutionalism in the European Order /$rAgustin Jose Menendez -- $g1.$tIntroduction -- $g2.$tAre the Constitutional Treaty and the Lisbon Treaty So Different? -- $g3.$tThe Ambivalence of European Constitutional Law: Between Synthetic Constitutionalism and Systematic Experimentalism -- $g3.1.$tThe Ambivalent Nature of Community Law -- $g3.2.$tTwo Alternative Views: Synthetic Constitutionalism and Governance -- $g3.2.1.$tConstitutional Synthesis -- $g3.2.2.$tThe Governance Theory -- $g3.3.$tLaeken and Lisbon as Reflections of Synthetic Constitutionalism and of Governance -- $g4.$tConclusion -- $gPart II.$tThe Future of Regulation -- $gChapter 5.$tLegal Control of Regulatory Bodies: Principle, Policy, and Teleology /$rPaul Craig -- $g1.$tGeneral Precepts: Availability of Judicial Review -- $g1.1.$tCommunity Agencies and Bodies -- $g1.2.$tExecutive Agencies -- $g1.3.$tUnion Agencies and Bodies -- $g1.4.$tNational Agencies -- $g2.$tGeneral Precepts: Standing -- $g3.$tGeneral Precepts: Targeting Judicial Review -- $g3.1.$tThe Alignment of Review and Responsibility: Sogelma -- $g3.2.$tThe Alignment of Review and Power: Artegodan -- $g4.$tGeneral Precepts: Impact Assessment and Subsidiarity -- $g5.$tSpecific Areas: Regulation and Standardization -- $g5.1.$tAccess -- $g5.2.$tSubstance -- $g6.$tSpecific Areas: Competition -- $g7.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 6.$tEU Financial Regulation: From Harmonization to the Birth of EU Federal Financial Law /$rTakis Tridimas -- $g1.$tThe Early Years: Harmonization of Company and Securities Law -- $g2.$tThe FSAP and the Lamfalussy Process -- $g3.$tSalient Features of the Harmonization Programme -- $g4.$tThe Post-Crisis Phase: Panic and Reflection -- $g4.1.$tCrisis Management -- $g4.2.$tLaw Reform -- $g5.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 7.$tThe State, Competition and Public Services /$rChris Bovis -- $g1.$tIntroduction -- $g2.$tThe Conceptual Ingredients of Public Services under EU Law -- $g2.1.$tPublic Service Obligations, Universal Service Obligations, and Services of General Economic Interest -- $g2.2.$tThe Characteristics of Public Services -- $g2.3.$tThe Economic Assessment of Public Services and Reflections on the Role of the State -- $g3.$tThe Legal Treatment of the Financing of Public Services -- $g3.1.$tPublic Services and State Aid Assessment -- $g3.2.$tPublic Procurement and Public Services -- $g4.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 8.$tRegulating Media Markets: The Need for Subsidiarity and Clarity of Principle /$rMike Varney -- $g1.$tAn Illustration from the UK - BSKYB/ITV -- $g2.$tThe EU and the Media: Multiple Inputs into a Complex Regulatory Space -- $g3.$tFreedom to Provide Services and Media Markets -- $g4.$tThe Reform of the Ǹew Regulatory Framework ̀-- $g5.$tRecent Developments in State Aid Law to PSB -- $g6.$tMedia Pluralism and the European Commission -- $g7.$tConclusion -- $gPart III.$tCitizenship and Human Rights -- $gChapter 9.$tEU Laws̀ Fundamental Rights Regime and Post-National Constitutionalism: Kadis̀ Global Setting /$rGordon Anthony -- $g1.$tIntroduction -- $g2.$tGlobal Governance and Constitutionalism -- $g3.$tKadi: Its Facts and Findings -- $g4.$tKadi: A Critique and a Defence -- $g5.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 10.$tCitizenship and European Democracy: European Constitution and Treaty of Lisbon /$rMassimo La Torre -- $g1.$tA B̀aroque' Order -- $g2.$tTwo Versions -- $g3.$tEuropean Citizenship -- $g4.$tCitizenship and Political rights -- $g5.$tDemocatic Deficit Unsolved -- $gChapter 11.$tThe European Asylum Policy: Myth and Reality /$rDiana-Urania Galetta -- $g1.$tFrom the Geneva Convention on Refugees to The Hague Programme of November 2004: The First Stage of the European Asylum Policy (EAP) -- $g2.$tFrom the First to the Second Phase: Goals Achieved and Work Still to Be Done -- $g3.$tThe European Pact on Immigration and Asylum: A G̀olden Opportunity' or just another Political Commitment? -- $g4.$tThe Existing Legislative Instruments: Too Much ADO about Nothing? -- $g5.$tSubstantive EU Law, Member States' Procedural Autonomy and the Rule of the ECJ: Ǹo Martini, No Party ̀-- $g6.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 12.$tTransparency and Access to Documents /$rPatrick Birkinshaw -- $g1.$tIntroduction -- $g2.$tWhat is Transparency and How Does It Relate to Openness and Access to Information? -- $g3.$tTransparency, Access, and the EU -- $g4.$tThe Record on Transparency -- $g5.$tThe Joint Code on Access -- $g6.$tThe Regulation on Access to Information -- $g7.$tThe Regulation on Access 1049/2001 -- $g8.$tThe Exceptions -- $g9.$tThe Decision-Making Process of an Institution -- $g10.$tDocuments Originating from a Member State -- $g11.$tEU Documents Held by a Member State -- $g12.$tApplications -- $g13.$tSensitive Documents -- $g14.$tRegisters, Access, and Related Areas -- $g15.$tThe Report on Implementation -- $g16.$tProposals for Reform -- $g17.$tProposals for Exceptions -- $g17.1.$tProtection of the Environment -- $g17.2.$tCourt Proceedings and Legal Advice -- $g17.3.$tIndividual Privacy -- $g17.4.$tDecision Making -- $g17.5.$tMember State Documents -- $g17.6.$tMiscellaneous -- $g18.$tOverall Impact -- $g19.$tThe European Parliaments̀ Proposals -- $g20.$tThe Treaty of Lisbon -- $gPart IV.$tConstitutional and Legal Principles in an Uncertain Order -- $gChapter 13.$tMultilevel Governance and Executive Federalism: Comparing Germany and the European Union /$rJacques Ziller -- $g1.$tSeparation of Powers and the Five Functions of Government -- $g2.$tExecutive Federalism -- $g3.$tA Functional Perspective on the Executive Function: Comparing German Executive Federalism with EU Executive Federalism -- $g4.$tConstitutional Principles Applying to Executive Federalism -- $g5.$tExecution of Federal Law by the Lander in their Own Right ̀-- $g6.$tExecution by the Lander òn Federal Commission ̀-- $g7.$tConclusion -- $gChapter 14.$tThe Role of European Judges in an Era of Uncertainty /$rJohn Bell -- $g1.$tUncertainty and the Conventional Judicial Role -- $g2.$tNational Court Approaches to Reducing Uncertainty -- $g2.1.$tEvidential Uncertainty -- $g2.2.$tNormative Uncertainty -- $g2.3.$tExistential Uncertainty -- $g2.4.$tDeference -- $g2.5.$tInstitutional Position -- $g3.$tThe European Court of Justice -- $g3.1.$tInstitutional Role -- $g4.$tWhat Workload is Being Created? -- $g4.1.$tLimiting the Role on Law and Fact -- $g4.2.$tNormative Uncertainty -- $g5.$tConclusion --
505 80 $gChapter 15.$tThe Esoteric Dimension of Constitutional Pluralism: EUs̀ Internal Constitutional Sub-units and the Non-symbolic Cumulative Constitution /$rConstantinos Kombos -- $g1.$tIntroduction -- $g2.$tTheoretical Background to Pluralism and the Ontological Parameter of Constitutional Pluralism -- $g2.1.$tConstitutional Vocabulary and Theories of Relational Pluralism -- $g2.2.$tConstitutional Pluralism and Its Different Aspects -- $g2.3.$tOntological Pluralism: National Constitutional Qualities, Revolutionary and Evolutionary Constitutions, and the Role of Constitutional Symbolism -- $g2.4.$tOntological Pluralism: Formalistic Criteria and/or Functional Criteria? -- $g3.$tP̀lurality of Constitutional Pluralities:̀ The Internal, Esoteric Constitutional Sub-Units of the Union -- $g4.$tAn Overview of the Internal Constitutional Pluralism of the Union: The Constitutional Sub-Units and Recent Case Law of the ECJ -- $g4.1.$tSocial versus Economic Sub-Units -- $g4.2.$tThe Juridical Constitutional Sub-Unit -- $g4.3.$tThe Security Constitutional Sub-Unit -- $g5.$tConclusion.
520 1 $a"After a variety of stumbling blocks and false starts, the Treaty of Lisbon is now In force, despite the widespread Instability let loose in the tea two years as protectionism reared its terrified head in many EU Member States and nationalisation and massive state support for the national banking sector became panaseas for the global financial drama. Nonetheless, forces are still at large that seem to threaten the basic freedoms of the Union and to undernine the future of the common market. Given these circumstatxes, in June 2009 the Institute of European Public Law of the University of Hulf assembled a range of experts in relevant fields to offer papars and reach some consensus on what has been achieved in the EU legal order and what the future holds for that order given local tensions and global uncertairety. This remarkable volume reprints those papers." "An authontative appraisal of challenges facing the process of Europeanization al a time of considerable uncertainty for the European Union and its legal order, this volume examines the present state of development of different areas of European law and reflects on the future for these areas in the light of the impasse on constitutional and legal reform and their eventual resolution As Such it will prove to be highly relevant to current and future debales in this area and should be of considerable interest to scholars in European law politics and allied fields."--BOOK JACKET.
650 0 $aLaw$zEuropean Union countries.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2009129017
610 20 $aEuropean Union.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2007008498
630 00 $aTreaty on European Union$d(1992 February 7).$kProtocols, etc.$d(2007 December 13)$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2008052410
700 1 $aBirkinshaw, Patrick.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n85199972
700 1 $aVarney, Mike.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2005089353
830 0 $aEuropean monographs ;$v70.
852 00 $bleh$hKJE947$i.E975 2010g