The Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies: Vol 1. 1998

Subjects:
EU Law
Contents:
Reflections on the general principles of Community Law, G.C. Rodriguez Iglesias
maintaining the community legal order in a changing world, J.-L. Dewost
community decision-making after Amsterdam, A. Dashwood
economic and monetary union - a model for flexibility? J.A. Usher
the Corpus Juris project and the fight against budgetary fraud, J. Spencer
opting out and opting in - problems and practical arrangements under the Schengen agreement, J. de Zwaan
the Human Rights Act - bringing rights home, s. palmer
some are more equal than others - the decision of the Court of Justice in Grant versus Southwest Trains, C. Barnard
Article 13 of EC and discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation, L. Waddington
after Kalanke and Marschall - affirming affirmative action, S. Fredman
the role of national parliaments in the making of European Law, T. Pratt
cutting your losses in the enforcement deficit - a community right to the recovery of unlawful levied charges? M. Dougan
stitching Greenpeace and environmental public interest standing before the community judicature - some lessons from the Federal Court of Canada, H. McLeod-Kilmurray.

ISBN13: 9781841130880
ISBN: 1841130885
Published: July 1999
Publisher: Hart Publishing
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Hardback
Price: £79.00

Each edition of the yearbook commences with the Mackenzie-Stuart Lecture, established in honour of Lord Mackenzie-Stuart, formerly President of the ECJ, and given each year in the Cambridge Law Faculty. The first lecturer, in 1997, was Judge G. Rodriguez Iglesias; the second was Mr Jean-Louis Dewost, Director General of the Commission's Legal Service. Their contributions launch this first volume.