European Union Law

EU Justice and Home Affairs Law, 3rd Edition

By Steve Peers
Oxford University Press February 2011

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780199604906
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
February 2011
Format
Hardback
Jurisdiction
European Union ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

A detailed and thorough overview, analysis, and critique of the Justice and Home Affairs Law of the European Union
All chapters fully updated and revised to take into account the changes brought in by the Treaty of Lisbon, and recent legislation and case-law
New to this edition

Fully updated to reflect the changes effected by the Lisbon Treaty
Includes more than 200 pages of new material, exhaustively tracking recent developments in legislation and case-law
Incorporates new chapters on visas and criminal jurisdiction/prosecution
The third edition of EU Justice and Home Affairs Law is comprehensively updated and expanded to take account of the major changes introduced by the Treaty of Lisbon and the development of legislation and case-law since the last edition. It includes analysis of the widened jurisdiction of the EU's Court of Justice, the revised rules on the participation of the UK, Ireland and Denmark and relations with non-EU countries in this field, and of the impact of the new framework for human rights law in the EU, including the binding status of the EU's Charter of Fundamental Rights and the EU accession to the ECHR.

In the area of immigration and asylum law, this new edition scrutinizes a wide range of issues that include; the development of the EU's border control agency; the adoption of an EU visas code; EU databases (such as the Visa Information System and the second-generation Schengen Information System); the further development of the Common European Asylum System; the EU's Returns Directive; and the Blue Card Directive for the admission of highly-skilled workers.

In the area of civil law, this new edition contains an updated overview of recent legislation, including EU rules on conflicts of law, maintenance, payment orders, small claims and mediation.

As regards criminal law and policing, the new edition includes detailed analysis of EU legislation and case law on issues such as suspects' and victims' rights, the European Arrest Warrant, the transfer of prisoners, other post-trial and pre-trial decisions, double jeopardy rules, EU anti-terrorist sanctions, data protection, and the development of Europol and Eurojust.

Readership: Academics, practitioners and postgraduate students working in the fields of EU Justice and Home Affairs, criminal law, criminal procedure, policing, immigration, asylum, visas, border controls, customs, human rights, civil liberties and responses to terrorism.

Table of Contents

1: Principles
2: Institutional Framework
3: Internal and External Borders
4: Visas and Freedom to Travel
5: Asylum
6: Legal Migration
7: Irregular Migration
8: Civil Cooperation
9: Criminal Law: Mutual Recognition and Criminal Procedure
10: Substantive Criminal Law
11: Criminal Law: Jurisdiction, Coordination, and Prosecution
12: Policing and Security
Appendix 1: Status of treaties
Appendix 2: Status of third pillar measures

About the Author

Steve Peers, Professor of Law, Law School, University of Essex

Steve Peers is a Professor of Law at the Law School of the University of Essex. He has written extensively on EU Justice and Home Affairs Law, as well as on EU constitutional, human rights, and external relations law. 

 

Reviews

Review(s) from previous edition

"Steve Peers's book on ' Third Pillar ' matters is a remarkable volume, at both what one might call the ' macro- ' and ' micro- ' levels. At the higher level, it gives some sense of quite how much action has been taken in the sensitive fields of criminal law and immigration under the EU umbrella. At the level of detail, Peers shows just how complex the programmes are. ...It is a tribute to the massive endeavour of Professor Peers, as well as to the broad scope of his knowledge, that this book carries off with enormous authority both the macro- and micro- tasks. - Colin Warbrick, International Journal of Refugee Law, Vol 20, No.1, March 2008

"EU Justice and Home Affairs Law offers a thorough and accessible account of this important and developing area of law...This book will be of real value to those working in criminal law, legislation, policy development and considering as it does visa, border control and the free movement of people, those within immigration and asylum and related areaS" - David Dickson, Extradition Team Leader, International Co-operation Unit Crown Office Edinburgh

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