This chapter provides the introduction to the edited volume by spotlighting the Boards of Appeal (BoAs) in the context of the rise of agencies in the EU administration. It sets out how BoAs are internal review bodies of EU agencies that allow a certain level of administrative protection which needs to be exhausted before private parties can seize the EU Courts but which, in principle, also allows a more in-depth review of agency decisions compared to the review offered by the courts. Sketching this context, the chapter identifies the overarching research question of the edited volume as how the Boards of Appeal should be conceptualized and assessed both as a mechanism of legal protection and as to the degree to which they deliver on their t...
The present contribution explores the approach of the court of justice of european union towards the...
The article examines the Boards of Appeal entrusted with the task of reviewing administrative decis...
Even though EU agencies are poorly embedded in the EU’s constitutionalframework their proliferation ...
This chapter provides the introduction to the edited volume by spotlighting the Boards of Appeal (Bo...
This chapter offers concluding observations on the essence and functioning of the Boards of Appeal (...
While the EU agencies that have been granted the power to adopt binding decisions are a diverse grou...
Agencification phenomenon in the EU has led to concerns about controls over EU agencies’ actions. As...
In Germany v ECHA and BASF v ECHA , the General Court was asked, for the very first time, to review ...
This chapter illustrates the peculiar nature of the Boards of Appeal (BoA) of EU agencies, which ha...
The creation and empowerment of European Union (EU) agencies constitutes one of the most momentous d...
This chapter introduces to Administrative Law. Its focus is on the procedural and substantive requir...
This chapter addresses administrative silence as regulated by the rules applicable to the eu own adm...
The question of the extent to which EU institutions can grant powers to EU decentralised agencies ha...
Article 58a of the Statute of the Court of Justice of the European Union, introduced through Regulat...
The article examines the Boards od Appeal entrusted with the task of reviewing administrative decisi...
The present contribution explores the approach of the court of justice of european union towards the...
The article examines the Boards of Appeal entrusted with the task of reviewing administrative decis...
Even though EU agencies are poorly embedded in the EU’s constitutionalframework their proliferation ...
This chapter provides the introduction to the edited volume by spotlighting the Boards of Appeal (Bo...
This chapter offers concluding observations on the essence and functioning of the Boards of Appeal (...
While the EU agencies that have been granted the power to adopt binding decisions are a diverse grou...
Agencification phenomenon in the EU has led to concerns about controls over EU agencies’ actions. As...
In Germany v ECHA and BASF v ECHA , the General Court was asked, for the very first time, to review ...
This chapter illustrates the peculiar nature of the Boards of Appeal (BoA) of EU agencies, which ha...
The creation and empowerment of European Union (EU) agencies constitutes one of the most momentous d...
This chapter introduces to Administrative Law. Its focus is on the procedural and substantive requir...
This chapter addresses administrative silence as regulated by the rules applicable to the eu own adm...
The question of the extent to which EU institutions can grant powers to EU decentralised agencies ha...
Article 58a of the Statute of the Court of Justice of the European Union, introduced through Regulat...
The article examines the Boards od Appeal entrusted with the task of reviewing administrative decisi...
The present contribution explores the approach of the court of justice of european union towards the...
The article examines the Boards of Appeal entrusted with the task of reviewing administrative decis...
Even though EU agencies are poorly embedded in the EU’s constitutionalframework their proliferation ...