This book is essential reading for advanced researchers in EU external relations law that reaps fascinating insights from an academically diverse range of authors, collectively striving to further understand and explain the Court's true impact.
- Graham Butler, European Journal of Legal Studies
1. Introduction Marise Cremona and Anne Thies
PART I THE CJEU’S ROLE IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF EXTERNAL RELATIONS LAW
2. A Reticent Court? Policy Objectives and the Court of Justice Marise Cremona
3. A Selfish Court? The Court of Justice and the Design of International Dispute Settlement beyond
the European Union Bruno de Witte
4. A Powerless Court? The European Court of Justice and the Common Foreign and Security Policy Christophe Hillion
PART II JURISPRUDENCE AND THE ALLOCATION OF EXTERNAL COMPETENCE
5. Vertical Division of Competences and the Objectives of the European Union’s External Action Eleftheria Neframi
6. The Case Law of the Court of Justice of the EU and the Allocation of External Relations Powers: Whither the Traditional Role of the Executive in EU Foreign Relations? Pieter Jan Kuijper
7. The Potential for Inter-Institutional Conflicts before the Court of Justice: Impact of the Lisbon Treaty Peter Van Elsuwege
PART III EXTERNAL RELATIONS, THE COURT AND THE UNION LEGAL ORDER
8. General Principles in the Development of EU External Relations Law Anne Thies
9. The Many Visions of Europe. Insights from the Reasoning of the European Court of Justice in External Relations Law Loïc Azoulai
10. The Court of Justice’s Participation in Judicial Discourse: Theory and Practice Christina Eckes
PART IV THE COURT AND THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM
11. The Kadi Case—Constitutional Core Values and International Law—Finding the Balance? Juliane Kokott and Christoph Sobotta
12. The Arrangement Governing the Relationship between the ECtHR and the CJEU in the Draft Treaty on the Accession of the EU to the ECHR Joni Heliskoski
13. Worlds Apart? Comparing the Approaches of the European Court of Justice and the EU Legislature to International Law Jan Wouters, Jed Odermatt and Thomas Ramopoulos
Refreshing new takes on EU law.
Modern Studies in European Law publishes the best new academic works on EU law by younger scholars in the subject. The series embraces the full scope of scholarship on EU law from doctrinal analysis to theoretical exploration, and also encourages inter-disciplinary, comparative and historical approaches, the overall aim being to publish innovative work which will widen knowledge and understanding of the place of law in the creation of Europe.
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Biographical note
Marise Cremona is Professor of European Law at the European University Institute in Florence.
Anne Thies is Associate Professor of European and international law at the University of Reading.