This book aims at filling this gap by providing the typical approaches to European tax law with a general vision on European law, and puts together theory and practice, but also includes contributions on selected relevant issues arising in ...
... 'Who's afraid of the ECJ: Charting the UK's relationship with the European Court' (The Institute for Government, December 2017); Andy Jordan, Charlie Burns and Viviane Gravey, 'Three Brexit governance gaps no one is talking about' ...
501 et seq; Daniel S. Smit, “The Relationship between the Free Movement of Capital and other EC Treaty Freedoms in Third Country Relationships in the Field of Direct Taxation: a question of exclusivity, parallelism or causality?
A verbal response will be made by Frank Barry based on the Institute of European Affairs publication Who's Afraid of the ECJ? – Implications of the European Court of Justice Decisions on Ireland's Corporation Tax Regime.
In the working legal order of the EU, the powers of the ECJ do not in fact lie solely on the single basis of judicial selfassertion. The other relevant agencies and institutions have accepted thesedecisions and acted inthe spiritof them ...
60 D. Sarmiento, 'Who's afraid of the Charter? The ECJ, national courts and the new framework of fundamental rights protection in Europe', Common Market Law Review (2013), ...
The rulings of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) can, for instance, change the legal status of a soft law measure. Österdahl has argued that ... 15I Österdahl, 'The ECJ and Soft Law: Who's Afraid of the EU Fundamental Rights Charter?
... I. Osterdahl, “The ECJ and Soft Law: Who's Afraid of the EU Fundamental Rights Charter?”, in Mtirth 2004, pp. 37-60, at p. 58. This Code of Conduct on public access to Commission and Council documents (93/730/EC; OJ 1993, ...
The aim of this book, therefore, is to help close that gap in the knowledge concerning the role and function of the Court of Justice of the European (CJEU) outside its own borders in selected countries.
A rising interdependence among the members of international society and of global civil society has led to an increasing demand for governance without government. The new regulatory mode is characterized...