This book chapter analyses the different treatment of married and unmarried couples in the EU from the perspective of the application of fundamental rights to private law matters - the 'horizontal effect of fundamental rights' debate. This theme is usually discussed exclusively within the context of public or private law, so this work constitutes an original contribution to the debate on the subject-matter. The chapter compares relevant statutory instruments and case-law from nine jurisdictions, and concludes with policy recommendations
This thesis analyses the horizontal effect of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Unio...
The paper raises the issue of a normative justification of the horizontal effect of fundamental righ...
It seems to be undisputed today that the harmonization of private law inEurope cannot take place wit...
This book chapter analyses the 'horizontal effect of fundamental rights and freedoms' debate in the ...
The present paper deals with the ‘horizontal effect’ of European fundamental rights in the jurisprud...
The present chapter embeds the Dutch system of horizontal application of European fundamental rights...
This chapter explores how and for which societal governance purposes fundamental rights are applied ...
The present chapter embeds the Dutch system of horizontal application of European fundamental rights...
The Direct Effect doctrine, originally established by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in the cas...
The book explores, from a comparative and inter-disciplinary perspective, the relationship between f...
Discussing the role of fundamental rights in Private law is challenging not because the subject is c...
Over the last two decades, the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) has come to play a major ...
This article analyses the horizontal effect of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Uni...
This book chapter demonstrates through an analysis of the case law of the ECtHR and the CJEU that bo...
Only a minority of jurisdictions currently permit same-sex marriage – among them, England and Wales ...
This thesis analyses the horizontal effect of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Unio...
The paper raises the issue of a normative justification of the horizontal effect of fundamental righ...
It seems to be undisputed today that the harmonization of private law inEurope cannot take place wit...
This book chapter analyses the 'horizontal effect of fundamental rights and freedoms' debate in the ...
The present paper deals with the ‘horizontal effect’ of European fundamental rights in the jurisprud...
The present chapter embeds the Dutch system of horizontal application of European fundamental rights...
This chapter explores how and for which societal governance purposes fundamental rights are applied ...
The present chapter embeds the Dutch system of horizontal application of European fundamental rights...
The Direct Effect doctrine, originally established by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in the cas...
The book explores, from a comparative and inter-disciplinary perspective, the relationship between f...
Discussing the role of fundamental rights in Private law is challenging not because the subject is c...
Over the last two decades, the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) has come to play a major ...
This article analyses the horizontal effect of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Uni...
This book chapter demonstrates through an analysis of the case law of the ECtHR and the CJEU that bo...
Only a minority of jurisdictions currently permit same-sex marriage – among them, England and Wales ...
This thesis analyses the horizontal effect of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Unio...
The paper raises the issue of a normative justification of the horizontal effect of fundamental righ...
It seems to be undisputed today that the harmonization of private law inEurope cannot take place wit...