European Union Law

The Evolution of EU Law, 3rd Edition

Edited by Paul Craig · Grainne De Burca
Oxford University Press September 2021

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780192846563
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
September 2021
Format
Paperback
Jurisdiction
European Union ? Countri(es) for reference only

Also available as

Details

This last decade has been particularly turbulent for the EU. Beset by crises - the financial crisis, the rule of law crisis, the migration crisis, Brexit, and the pandemic - European Law has had to adapt and change in a way not previously seen. First published in 1999, the goal then was to reflect on the important developments that had been made since the creation of the EEC. That goal has not changed. From EU Administrative Law through to the Regulation of Network Industries, each chapter in this seminal work assess the legal and political forces that have shaped the evolution of EU law. With new chapters covering the Rule of Law, Judicial Reform, Brexit, Constitutional and Legal Theory, Refugee and Asylum law, and Data Governance, this third edition of The Evolution of EU Law is a must read for any student or academic of EU law.

Table of Contents

1: Paul Craig: Introduction
2: Paul Craig: Integration, Democracy, and Legitimacy
3: Paul Craig: Institutions, Power, and Institutional Balance
4: Kieran St Clair Bradley: Powers and Procedures in the EU Constitution: Legal Bases and the Court
5: Martin Shapiro: Independent Agencies
6: Alec Stone Sweet: The European Court of Justice
7: Deirdre M. Curtin & Ige F. Dekker: The European Union from Maastricht to Lisbon: Institutional and Legal Unity out of the Shadows
8: Christophe Hillion: EU Enlargement
9: Marise Cremona: External Relations and External Competence of the European Union: The Emergence of an Integrated Policy
10: Steve Peers: EU Justice and Home Affairs Law (non-civil)
11: Eva Storskrubb: Civil Justice - A Newcomer and an Unstoppable Wave?
12: Bruno de Witte: Direct Effect, Primacy and the Nature of the Legal Order
13: Thomas de la Mare & Catherine Donnelly: Preliminary Rulings and EU Legal Integration: Evolution and Stasis
14: Michael Dougan: The Vicissitudes of Life at the Coalface: Remedies and Procedures for Enforcing Union Law before the National Courts
15: Carol Harlow: Three Phases in the Evolution of EU Administrative Law
16: Gráinne De Búrca: The Evolution of EU Human Rights Law
17: Siofra O'Leary: Free Movement of Persons and Services
18: Jukka Snell: Free Movement of Capital: Evolution as a Non-Linear Process
19: Jo Shaw: Citizenship: Contrasting Dynamics at the Interface of Integration and Constitutionalism
20: Mark Bell: The Principle of Equal Treatment: Widening and Deepening
21: Catherine Barnard: EU 'Social' Policy: From Employment Law to Labour Market Reform
22: Francis Snyder: EMU - Integration and Differentiation: Metaphor for European Union
23: Imelda Maher: Competition Law Modernization: An Evolutionary Tale?
24: Leigh Hancher & Pierre Larouche: The Coming of Age of EU Regulation of Network Industries and Services of General Economic Interest
25: Takis Tridimas: EU Financial Regulation: Federalization, Crisis Management and Law Reform
26: Joanne Scott: The Multi-Level Governance of Climate Change
27: Stephen Weatherill: Consumer Policy
28: Rachael Craufurd Smith: Culture and European Union Law: Always the Bridesmaid, Never the Bride?;

About the Author

Edited by Paul Craig, Professor of English Law, University of Oxford, and Fellow of St John's College, and Gráinne de Búrca, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School

Professor Paul Craig, FBA, QC, has taught at Oxford since 1976. He has written extensively about EU Law, including EU Law, Text Cases and Materials, written with Grainne de Burca, EU Administrative Law, and The Lisbon Treaty.

Grainne de Burca is Professor at Harvard Law School. She was Professor of Law at Fordham Law School from 2006-2009, Professor of EU Law at the European University Institute from 1998-2005, and Fellow and Lecturer in law at Oxford University from 1990-1998. Her books include EU Law: Text, Cases and Materials, (currently in its 4th edition and co-written with Paul Craig); Law and New Governance in the European Union and the United States, co-edited with Joanne Scott, and EU Law and the Welfare State.

Contributors: 

Catherine Barnard, Trinity College, University of Cambridge
Mark Bell, School of Law, University of Leicester
Kieran St Clair Bradley, Head of Unit, European Parliament Legal Service
Paul Craig, St John's College, University of Oxford
Marise Cremona, European University Institute, Florence
Rachael Craufurd Smith, University of Edinburgh
Deirdre M. Curtin, University of Amsterdam and Utrecht University
Gráinne De Búrca, Harvard Law School
Ige F. Dekker, Utrecht University
Thomas de la Mare, Blackstone Chambers, London
Bruno de Witte, European University Institute, Florence
Catherine Donnelly, Blackstone Chambers, London, and Trinity College Dublin
Michael Dougan, Liverpool Law School
Leigh Hancher, Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University
Carol Harlow, London School of Economics, Emeritus
Christophe Hillion, Universities of Leiden and Stockholm
Pierre Larouche, Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University
Imelda Maher, University College Dublin
Siofra O'Leary, College of Europe, Bruges
Steve Peers, University of Essex
Joanne Scott, University College London
Martin Shapiro, University of California Berkeley School of Law
Jo Shaw, University of Edinburgh
Jukka Snell, Swansea University School of Law
Francis Snyder, London School of Economics and Université Paul Cézanne (Aix-Marseille III)
Alec Stone Sweet, Yale Law School
Eva Storskrubb, Senior Associate at Dittmar & Indrenius, Helsinki
Takis Tridimas, Queen Mary School of Law, London
Stephen Weatherill, Somerville College, University of Oxford

Reviews

Review(s) from previous edition

"This is a serious, comprehensive exploration of the understanding of EU law as it has developed. - Edward Kirke, Liverpool John Moores University

"This volume, like many books of its kind, poses more questions than it has answers for, but the answers it suggests are crucial, seminal and riveting to anyone interested in why a nation or a corporate body has a constitution. ... the editors have done a masterly job in weaving together crucial research and opinion on such issues as comitology, delegated agencies, tertiary structures in general and the enumeration and control of them. The heavy intellectualism of this book should not obscure the luminosity of its arguments, which, after all, remain easy to understand." - Michael L Nash, Contemporary Review, December 1999 Page 322

"...an excellent collection of strong and thought-provoking contributions...an extremely accessible account of the story of EU law." - T.K. Hervey, University of Nottingham, European Public Law

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