Given its high level of regulation, the gambling industry must be able to react quickly to litigation and resulting change in policy (and enforcement thereof). Using a case study approach, this short paper highlights how the twin issues of policy and litigation have recently impacted the gambling industry in the European Union. Examples focus on recent developments in the EU that outline the relevant contours of the European Court of Justice’s jurisprudence, with a special emphasis on the dynamic situation in Greece. These examples shape the ensuing discussion of the future of both the regulation and litigation of the EU’s gambling industry
The neoliberal “free-market” exportation strategies of online gambling used by countries like Malta ...
In the Netherlands, the Betting and Gaming Act from 1964 largely determines the current structure of...
The recent economic crisis has brought into focus how even open and highly interdependent economies ...
Given its high level of regulation, the gambling industry must be able to react quickly to litigatio...
The EU Member States in general have striven to comply with Court of Justice of the European Union r...
For nearly two decades battles have been fought regarding gambling using the free movement principle...
Introduction United Kingdom; shifting towards point of consumption regulation Member States; compete...
This paper deals with the liberalization of Dutch gambling markets, in particular the (re)regu-latio...
This paper deals with the liberalization of Dutch gambling markets, in particular the (re)regulation...
Every Member State in Europe has a wide discretionary power to choose which specific restrictive mea...
European legal integration can be envisioned as containing two dimensions of legal integration: vert...
Why are gambling markets treated so differently to other markets? This apperently trivial question i...
A rapidly growing globalized and digitalized gambling industry has compelled European jurisdictions ...
The combination of public goals and fiscal interests collides with the need to harmonise and liberal...
AIMS – The principles of free trade and free circulation of services within the European Union have ...
The neoliberal “free-market” exportation strategies of online gambling used by countries like Malta ...
In the Netherlands, the Betting and Gaming Act from 1964 largely determines the current structure of...
The recent economic crisis has brought into focus how even open and highly interdependent economies ...
Given its high level of regulation, the gambling industry must be able to react quickly to litigatio...
The EU Member States in general have striven to comply with Court of Justice of the European Union r...
For nearly two decades battles have been fought regarding gambling using the free movement principle...
Introduction United Kingdom; shifting towards point of consumption regulation Member States; compete...
This paper deals with the liberalization of Dutch gambling markets, in particular the (re)regu-latio...
This paper deals with the liberalization of Dutch gambling markets, in particular the (re)regulation...
Every Member State in Europe has a wide discretionary power to choose which specific restrictive mea...
European legal integration can be envisioned as containing two dimensions of legal integration: vert...
Why are gambling markets treated so differently to other markets? This apperently trivial question i...
A rapidly growing globalized and digitalized gambling industry has compelled European jurisdictions ...
The combination of public goals and fiscal interests collides with the need to harmonise and liberal...
AIMS – The principles of free trade and free circulation of services within the European Union have ...
The neoliberal “free-market” exportation strategies of online gambling used by countries like Malta ...
In the Netherlands, the Betting and Gaming Act from 1964 largely determines the current structure of...
The recent economic crisis has brought into focus how even open and highly interdependent economies ...