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EC employment law / Barnard, Catherine. - 2. ed.., cv, 600 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2000.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Part 1 : The Evolution of EC Social Policy. Part 2 : Law-Making in the Field of Social Policy. Part 3 : Free Movement of Persons. Part 4 : Equality Law. Part 5 : Social Security and Pensions. Part 6 : Health, Safety, and Working Conditions. Part 7 : Employment Rights on the Restructuring of Enterprises. Part 8 : Collective Labour Law.
Negotiating Europe's immigration frontiers / Melis, Barbara - (Immigration and asylum law and policy in Europe ; vol. 3), xv, 250 p.. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2001.
ABSTRACT: Part 1: Immigration in Europe: An Introduction. I. Immigration in Europe. Part 2: Immigrant Policies in the European Union. II. The Legal Status of TCNS in the EU. III. The Treaty of Amsterdam. IV. Freedom of Movement Provisions. V. The Social Rights of TCNS. VI. Working Conditions and the Right to Residence. Part 3: Immigration Policy in the European Union. VII: Admission Policies and Rules. VIII. Admission for TCNS Family Members. Part 4: The Repressive Side of Immigration Policy: Controls and Expulsion Measures. X. Expulsion Measures. Conclusions. Bibliography. Annexes. Table of Treaties and Legislation. Index.
The elusive and exclusive concept of Union citizenship : a review essay Siofra O'Leary : The evolving concept of Community citizenship / van der Mei, A. P.
Cambridge yearbook of European law : vol. 4 / Dashwood, Alan ... [et al.], lx, 450 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2002.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. The Elements of a Constitutional Settlement for the European Union, by Alan Dashwood. 2. Harmonisation and Co-operation within the Third Pillar— Built in risks, by Petter Asp. 3. Criminal Jurisdiction, the Public Dimension to ‘Effective Protection’ and the Construction of Community-Citizen Relations, by Estella Baker. 4. Judicial Cultures and Judicial Independence, by John Bell. 5. A Policy of Bits and Pieces? The Common Commercial Policy after Nice, by Marise Cremona. 6. Free Movement: The Workseeker as Citizen, by Michael Dougan. 7. The Charter of Fundamental Rights and Beyond, by Jacqueline Dutheil de la Rochère. 8. The Public Sector as a Good Employer: the Application of the Acquired Rights Directive to Public Authorities, by Amandine Garde. 9. Judicial Review in EC and EU Law — Some Architectural Malfunctions and Design Improvements?, by Laurence W. Gormley. 10. The Quest for a Master Key to Control Parallel Imports, by Inge Govaere. 11. The First Two Years of the Competition Commission Appeal Tribunals, by Mark Jephcott. 12. The Elusive Quest for Uniformity in EC External Relations, by Panos Koutrakos. 13. The ‘TBT Agreement’: a Perfect Tool to Monitor Regulatory Activities Worldwide, by Rodolphe Muñoz. 14. The Status of Member States not Participating in the Euro, by David O’ Keeffe and Catherine Turner. 15. Harmony and Dissonance in Free Movement, by Miguel Poires Maduro. 16. Trespassing on Sacred Ground: The Implied External Competence of the European Community, by David Scannell. 17. The Developing EC Private International Law on Family Matters, by Peter Stone. 18. Judicial Architecture at the Cross-Roads: Private Parties and Challenge to EC Measures Post-Jégo-Quéré, by Angela Ward.
REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: The Finnish yearbook of international law (FYBIL) : 2000 : vol. XI / Koskenniemi, M. (Ed.-in-Chief), p. 37-82. - Hague : Martinus Nijhoff Publ., 2003.
ABSTRACT: INNEHÅLL:. 1. Folkomröstningar och europeisk integration, av Rune Premfors. 2. Att utträda eller uteslutas ur Europeiska unionen, av Ingrid Larén Marklund och Lena Stenwall. 3. Medborgarskap ii EU - räckvidd och innebörd, av Ulf Bernitz och Hedvig Lokrantz Bernitz. 4. Rättsligt skydd av grundläggande fri- och rättigheter i Europeiska Unionen, av Ulf bernitz och Fredrik Bergström.
ABSTRACT: SISÄLLYS:. I. Informaatiosta ja informaatio-oikeudesta. II. Julkisuusperiaatteesta ja oikeudesta tietoon. III: Yhteiskunnan perusrekisterit ja perustietojärjestelmät. IV: Sähköinen asiointi ja sähköinen identiteetti.
Citizenship, nationality and access to public service employment : the impact of European Community law / Beenen, J. E., xiv, 298 p.. - Groningen : Europa Law Publ., 2001.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Chapter 1 : Introduction. 1. Central problem. 2. Structure of this thesis. Chapter 2: Free Movement of Persons within the European Union. 1. Introduction. 2. Free movement of persons within the EU. 2.1 Article 39 (ex Article 48) EC. 2.1.1 Non-discrimination on grounds of nationality. 2.1.2 The defi nition of a worker in EU law. 2.1.3 The rights contained in Article 39 (ex Article 48) EC. 2.2 Secondary legislation. 2.2.1 Regulation 1612/68. 2.2.2 Directive 68/360. 2.2.3 Regulation 1251/70. 2.2.4 Regulation 1408/71. 3. Exceptions to free movement. 3.1 Directive 64/221. 3.2 Public policy. 3.3 Public security. 3.4 Public health. 3.5 The public service exception. 4. Conclusions. Chapter 3: Citizenship. 1. Introduction. 2. The concepts of citizenship and nationality. 2.1 Citizenship. 2.2 Nationality. 2.3 The differences between the concepts of citizenship and nationality. 3. Citizenship of the European Union. 3.1 Characteristics of EU citizenship. 3.2 Historical development of European citizenship. 3.3 Citizenship in the EC Treaty. 3.3.1 Introduction. 3.3.2 The rights of citizens of the Union. 3.3.2(a)Article 17 (ex Article 8) EC: establishing Union citizenship. 3.3.2(b)Article 18 (ex Article 8a) EC: freedom of movement. 3.3.2(c) Article 19 (ex Article 8b) EC: voting rights in EP and local elections. 3.3.2(d) Article 20 (ex Article 8c) EC: diplomatic and consular protection. 3.3.2(e) Article 21 (ex Article 8d) EC: petition right and the right to appeal to the Ombudsman. 3.4 Fundamental Rights. 3.5 Third-country nationals. 3.6 The dynamic character of European citizenship. 4. Conclusions. Chapter 4 Article 39 (4) (ex Article 48 (4)) EC: the Public Service Exception. 1. Introduction. 2. The history of public service exceptions. 3. The case law of the European Court. 3.1 Sotgiu v. Deutsche Bundespost, case 152/73. 3.2 Commission v. Belgium, case 149/79. 3.3 Commission v. France, case 307/84. 3.4 Lawrie-Blum v. Land Baden-Württemburg, case 66/85. 3.5 Commission v. Italy, case 225/85. 3.6 Allué & Coonan, case 33/88. 3.7 Bleis v. Ministère de l’Education Nationale, case C-4/91. 3.8 Commission v. Luxembourg, case C-473/93. 3.9 Commission v. Belgium, case C-173/94. 3.10 Commission v. Greece, case C-290/94. 3.11 Additional case law. 4. The Commission’s approach. 5. The Court’s approach. 5.1 The institutional versus the functional approach. 5.2 What is the functional approach?. 5.3 Civil servants versus contractual employees. 5.4 The cumulative versus alternative approach. 5.5 Posts included in the exception. 5.6 Posts not included in the exception. 5.7 The effect the European Court’s interpretation of the public service exception. 6 Further analysis of the Court’s approach. 7 Comparison with Article 45 (ex Article 55) EC. 8. Conclusions Chapter 5 : The Concept of the State in Two Other Areas of European Law. 1 Introduction. 2 Direct effect of directives. 2.1 Conditions for the direct effect of Community law. 2.2 The reasons for the direct effect of directives. 2.3 Case law. 2.4 Results of the direct effect of directives. 3 Public procurement. 3.2 Public procurement provisions. 3.3 The scope of the public procurement directives. 3.4 Case law. 4 Conclusions. Chapter 6 : Access to Public Employment in a Number of EU Member States; a General Study. 1 Introduction. 2 Legislative basis for the public service exception. 2.1 A general criterion. 2.2 A negative list. 2.3 A positive list. 2.4 A mixed system. 3 Changes in the legislation. 4 National court cases dealing with the public service exception. 5 Distinctions between civil servants proper and contractual employees. 6 Distinctions between EU-citizens and third-country nationals. 7 Conclusions. Chapter 7 : Access to Public Service Employment in the Netherlands. 1 Introduction. 2 Nationality requirements in the Netherlands. 3 The status of public service employees. 4 Civil servants. 5 The impact of European law on the Dutch public service. 6 Other categories of public service employees. 6.1 Decentralised authorities. 6.2 Police offi cers. 6.3 Parliamentary staff. 6.4 The judiciary. 6.5 Public bodies. 6.5.1 Development of government in the Netherlands. 6.5.2 The notion of adminstrative authority under the Algemene wet bestuursrecht (Awb). 6.6 Comparison of two public bodies. 6.6.1 Stichting Toezicht Effectenverkeer (STE). 6.6.2 Gezondheidsraad. 7 Conclusions. Chapter 8: Access to Public Service Employment in Belgium 1 Introduction. 2 Nationality requirements in Belgium. 2.1 History of the nationality requirement. 2.2 The demise of the institutional approach. 2.3 Current nationality requirements. 3 The status of public service employees. 3.1 The public service principles. 4 Civil servants. 4.1 The principle of loyalty and continuity. 4.2 Political neutrality. 5 The impact of European law on the Belgian public service. 6 Other categories of public service employees. 6.1 Decentralised authorities. 6.2 Police offi cers. 6.3 Parliamentary staff. 6.4 The judiciary. 6.5 Public bodies. 6.5.1 Openbare centra voor maatschappelijk welzijn. 7 Conclusions. Chapter 9: Access to Public Service Employment in The United Kingdom. 1 Introduction. 2 Nationality requirements in the United Kingdom. 2.1 Civil Service Nationality Rules. 2.2 Prescribed bodies according to the Race Relations Act (RRA). 3 The status of public service employees. 4 Civil servants. 4.1 Next Steps Agencies. 4.2 Special allegiance and the duty of loyalty. 4.3 Policital neutrality. 4.4 Public Service Ethos. 5 The impact of European law on the UK public service. 6 Other categories of public service employees. 6.1 Decentralised authorities. 6.2 Police offi cers. 6.3 Parliamentary staff. 6.4 The judiciary. 6.5 Public bodies. 6.5.1 Agencies. 6.5.1(a)The National Health Service (NHS). 6.5.2 Public corporations and nationalised industry. 6.5.2(a)The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). 7 Conclusions. Chapter 10: Summary and Conclusions 1 Summary. 2 Conclusions. 3 The Way Forward. Selective Bibliography. Table of Cases. List of Abbreviations.
Gender and human rights / Knop, Karen (ed.) - (The collected courses of the Academy of European Law ; vol. XII/2), ix, 256 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2004.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS: 1. Karen Knop: Introduction. 2. Nicola Lacey: Feminist Legal Therory and the Rights of Women. 3. Janet Halley: Take a Break from Feminism?. 4. Susanne Baer: Citizenship in Europe and the Construction of Gender by Law in the European Charter of Fundamental Rights. 5. Ruth Rubio-Marín and Martha I. Morgan: Constitutional Domestication of International Gender Norms: Categorizations, Illustrations, and reflections from the Nearside of the Bridge. 6. Patricia Viseur Sellers: Individual(s') Liability for Collective Sexual Violence. 7. Nathaniel Berman: 'The Appeals of the Orient': Colonized Desire and the War of the Riff. 8. Ruba Salih: Toward an Understanding of Transnationalism and Gender.
The European Union and its order : the legal theory of European integration / Bankowski, Zenon (ed.) ; Scott, Andrew, xii, 210 p.. - Oxford : Blackwell publ., 2000.
ABSTRACT: PREFACE, by Zenon Bankowski Bankowski and Andrew Scott. 1. Law without a state? On representing the common market, by Hans Lindahl and Hans Bert van Roermund. 2. The European Union as an Essentially Contested Project, by Zenon Bankowski. 3. Sovereignty and Differentiated Integration in the Euro pean Union, by Neil Walker. 4. The Problem of Membership in European Union Citizenship, by Jo Shaw. 5. Beyond the Bundesverfassungsgericht: On the Necessary Cunning of Constitutional Reasoning, by Michelle Everson. 6. Does the European Union Pervert Democracy? Questions of Democracy in New Constitutionalist Thought on the Future of Europe, by Daniel Wincott. 7. Legitimacy and Governance Beyond the European Nation State: Conceptualising Governance in the European Union, by Caitriona Carter. 8. The Limits of European Union Citizenship, by Carole Lyons. 9. Democracy, Sovereignty and the Constitution of the Europe Union: The Republican Alternative to Liberalism, by Richard Bellamy. 10. Identity and Democracy in the New Europe, by Ian Ward.
Constitutional law of the European Union / Douglas-Scott, l, 553 p.. - London : Pearson, 2002.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS: PART ONE: STRUCTURES 1. The European Union in Search of an Identity 2. Institutional Structures: Legislative and Executive 3. Law Making and Democracy in the EU 4. The Division of Powers Between the Community and Member States: Embryonic Federalism PART TWO: THE EUROPEAN COURTS, THE NATIONAL COURTS AND CONSTITUTION 1. The European Courts: Law, Policy and Judicial Activism 2. Preliminary References Under Article 234: Cooperative Partnership or Proto-Federalism? 3. Supremacy, Sovereignty and Pluralism 4. Direct Effect: Foundation of the Constitutional Order? 5. Remedies in the National Courts: The Effectiveness of EC Law on Trial PART THREE: DIRECT ACTIONS: A LACK OF INDIVIDUAL JUSTICE? 1. Controlling the Community Institutions: Judicial Review 2. Controlling the Community Institutions: Actions for Damages 3. Controlling the Member of States PART Four: THE DEVELOPING CONSTITUTION 1. The EU and Human Rights 2. In search of Union Citizenship 3. A Constitution for Europe?
Understanding EU law / Szyszcak, Erika ; Cygan, Adam - (The understanding law series), x, 333 p.. - London : Sweet & Maxwell, 2005.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. The Omni-Competent EU Treaties: supranational integration by nation states or statehood with a constitution. Administrative and Political Governance in the EU. Fundamental Rights and Citizenship in the EU: empowering the individual. Economic Integration. Governance and its Impact Upon the EU Citizen. A Europe of Shared Social Values? The Liberalisation of Markets: Redefining public services, privatisation, liberalisation, de-regulation and re-regulation in the EU. Globalisation and the EU. An EU For All Citizens: Wider integration or disintegration?
An introudction to collective bargaining and industrial relations / Katz, Harry ; Kochan, Thomas A.. - 3. ed.., xiv, 492 p.. - Boston, MAss. : McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2004.
Social security in transition / Berghman, Jos ... [et al.] - (Studies in employment and social policy), xv, 254 p.. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2002.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Social security in transition. An introduction, by Jos Berghman and Ad Nagelkerke. PART I : An outlook:. 1. Heading for the future: social security and social cohesion, by Jos Berghman and Ines Verhalle. 2. Pathways to the future of the welfare state. Institutional persistence, hybridization, reflexive modernization, or what?, by Wil Arts. 3. The elasticity of social security. The Federal Republic of Germany in a comparative perspective, by Manfred Schmidt. PART II : SOCIAL EXCLUSION AND INTEGRATION:. 1. Social exclusion in European welfare states: Which road should social policy take?, by Ruud Muffels and Didier Fouarge. 2. Modernized poverty: individualization, concentration and embeddedness, by Erik Snel and Godfried Engbersen. PART III : MIGRATION:. 1. Migration, social security and the law. Observations on the impact of migration policies upon the position of migrants in social security law in Europe, by Gijsbert Vonk. 2. European Union citizenship, freedom of movement and social assistance benefits, by Anne Pieter van der Mei. 3. Social security for migrants: does the European Union framework provide lessons for developments in SADC?, by Marius Olivier. PART IV : ACTIVATING SOCIAL SECURITY:. PART V : MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION.
Nyckel till EU-begrepp / Erkkilä, Tero ; Tiilikainen, Teija, 94 s.. - Helsingfors : Edita, 2004.
Medborgarskapet i Sverige och Europa : räckvidd och rättigheter / Lokrantz Bernitz, Hedvig, 621 p.. - Uppsala : Iustus, 2004.
ABSTRACT: INNEHÅLL:. 1. Inledning. 2. Begrepp och definitioner. 3. Medborgarskapets utveckling och grundlag. 4. Förvärv och förlust av medborgarskap i svensk rätt. 5. Förvärv och förlust av unionsmedborgarskap. 6. Det nationella medborgarskapets internationellrättsliga karaktär. 7. Unionsmedboragrskapets rättsliga karaktär. 8. Dubbelt medborgarskap. 9. Medborgarens och unionsmedborgarens rösträtt och valbarhet. 10. Rätten till rörelsefrihet - huvudlinjerna. 11. Passtvång och passfrihet. 12. Rätten till fri inresa i det egna landet och i övriga EU. 13. Rätten till fri utresa ur det egna landet och ur övriga EU. 14. Rätten att röra sig fritt i det egna landet och i övriga EU. 15. Rätten att ge diplomatiskt skydd till egna medborgare och till unionsmedborgare. 16. Tankar om unionsmedborgarskapets framtida utveckling : särskilt om domicil som ny urvalsgrund. 17. Sammanfattning och slutsatser. 18. Nationality and citizenship in Sweden and the European Union.
The European Union as a constitutional experiment / Bermann, George A.
Free movement of persons in the enlarged European Union / Rogers, Nicola ; Scannell, Rick, liii, 685 p.. - London : Sweet and Maxwell, 2005.
ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Part One: Fundamental principles of EU law. Part Two: Free Movement of EU Citizens and their Family Members. Part Three: Association Agreements with Third Countries. Part Four: Association Agreements with Central and Eastern European Countries. Part Five: Association Agreement with Turkey. Appendices.
Euroopan perustuslaki / Tiilikainen, Teija ; Heliskoski, Joni ; Helander, Petri, xii, 253 p.. - Helsinki : Edita Publ., 2005.
The constitution for Europe and an enlarging Union : unity in diversity? / Inglis, Kirstyn (ed.) ; Ott, Andrea, xvi, 306 p.. - Groningen : Europa Law Publ., 2005.
ABSTRACT: Chapter 1: Formalising European Constitutionalism; Potential Added Value or ‘Death by Constitution’, by Michiel Brand. Chapter 2: Towards a More Democratic Union? Comments on the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe, by Fabian Amtenbrink. Chapter 3 : Institutional Reform in the European Union; A Difficult Balancing Act, by Peter Van Elsuwege and An Vermeersch. Chapter 4 : The National Parliaments in an Enlarged Europe and the Constitutional Treaty, by Philipp Kiiver. Chapter 5 : The ‘Principle’ of Differentiation in an Enlarged European Union; Unity in Diversity?, by Andrea Ott. Chapter 6: Impact of European Union Enlargement on EMU; Monetary Split-up into ‘Ins’ and ‘Outs’ as a Temporary or Permanent Phenomenon?, by Beata Dziechciarz. Chapter 7: Differentiation in European Union Citizenship Law; The Cyprus Problem, by Nikolaos Skoutaris. Chapter 8: The Impact of Agriculture on the Success of Enlargement, by Sandra Marco Colino. Chapter 9: European Counter-terrorism in the Context of Enlargement: Challenges Ahead, by Przemys³aw Zysk. Chapter 10: EU Enlargement – Membership Conditions Applied to Future and Potential Member States, by Kirstyn Inglis. Chapter 11: Minority Protection in the EU – Challenges Ahead, by Peter Van Elsuwege. Chapter 12: Turkey’s Democratisation in Light of its EU Candidate Status; EU Enlargement at a Crossroads, by Ahmet Sözen.

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