For over 15 years, the reports of the EEA Agreement’s imminent demise have proven to be greatly exaggerated. In this article it is argued that a great deal of the credit for this accomplishment is due to the EFTA Court. Through a distinctly dynamic approach to the Agreement, the EFTA Court has been able to convince an initially sceptical ECJ that the goal of extending the internal market to include the EFTA States is actually achievable. For the EFTA States, the consequence is a more ‘supranational’ EEA Agreement than originally conceived. Further, it is shown that the EFTA Court appears, in hard cases, to lean even further towards teleological (ie integrationist) interpretation than the ECJ. It is suggested that this may be due to to struc...
In the ongoing effort to staunch the Euro crisis, last Friday saw the signing of a stringent new fis...
Doctrines developed by the EFTA Court have placed considerable demands on national courts in the EFT...
Conventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the Eu...
For over 15 years, the reports of the EEA Agreement’s imminent demise have proven to be greatly exag...
The EFTA Court has on numerous occasions faced arguments based on international law rules that exist...
The vertical dialogue with the national courts of the EEA/EFTA States, in particular the Supreme Cou...
In the relationship between the European Union and the EFTA States nearly all attention has recently...
Differently from other international tribunals set up in the context of regional economic integratio...
Presented at an international conference held by the EFTA Court on 17 June 2011acceptedVersio
On the basis of this comparison, the ECJ concluded that identical wording of EC and EEA law was no g...
In the scholarly debate about the relationship between the European Court of Human Rights and the CJ...
The current relationship between the two European courts has been discussed in some great detail wh...
This article looks at a less discussed topic in European legal scholarship: the horizontal direct ef...
The authority of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) over the interpretation of the Ag...
In determining the boundaries of supranational legislation some courts adopt an expansionist (dynami...
In the ongoing effort to staunch the Euro crisis, last Friday saw the signing of a stringent new fis...
Doctrines developed by the EFTA Court have placed considerable demands on national courts in the EFT...
Conventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the Eu...
For over 15 years, the reports of the EEA Agreement’s imminent demise have proven to be greatly exag...
The EFTA Court has on numerous occasions faced arguments based on international law rules that exist...
The vertical dialogue with the national courts of the EEA/EFTA States, in particular the Supreme Cou...
In the relationship between the European Union and the EFTA States nearly all attention has recently...
Differently from other international tribunals set up in the context of regional economic integratio...
Presented at an international conference held by the EFTA Court on 17 June 2011acceptedVersio
On the basis of this comparison, the ECJ concluded that identical wording of EC and EEA law was no g...
In the scholarly debate about the relationship between the European Court of Human Rights and the CJ...
The current relationship between the two European courts has been discussed in some great detail wh...
This article looks at a less discussed topic in European legal scholarship: the horizontal direct ef...
The authority of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) over the interpretation of the Ag...
In determining the boundaries of supranational legislation some courts adopt an expansionist (dynami...
In the ongoing effort to staunch the Euro crisis, last Friday saw the signing of a stringent new fis...
Doctrines developed by the EFTA Court have placed considerable demands on national courts in the EFT...
Conventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the Eu...