At first blush the Directive on the European Investigation Order does not seem revolutionary. It does not unify or harmonize the European legislations, and often reworks some old schemes of the previous evidence-gathering tools. However, if one considers its operational implications, it appears clear that the Directive could have the effect of changing the structure of the national evidentiary provisions, turning many of them from rigid \u201crules\u201d into flexible \u201cprinciples\u201d that have to be implemented by the judiciary in each concrete situation. Such genetic mutation is full of dangers, since it could worsen the standards of protection of fundamental rights so far granted by the national systems. This article suggests a car...
This article analyses the admissibility of evidence gathered by the Polish procedural authorities as...
This book is the last and final part of the project ›European Investigation Order – legal analysis a...
Any effort to gather evidence may prove pointless without ensuring its admissibility. Despite this f...
In April 2010 a group of EU Member States proposed a Directive on the European Investigation Order, ...
This article examines the controversial European Investigation Order - a Belgium-led Member States' ...
ABSTRACT: We emphasize in the present study that, in the context of cross-border crime evolution, it...
The issue of international cooperation in criminal matters has interested legal theorists and practi...
The European Investigation Order (EIO) was supposed to offer a comprehensive solution to cross-borde...
The European Investigation Order (EIO) was supposed to offer a comprehensive solution to cross-borde...
The EIO directive is an important measure for improving EU criminal justice cooperation. Its introdu...
In this paper we have conducted a general examination of the instruments governing the European inst...
The article focuses on the problematic issues of the European Union criminal justice, directly rela...
This chapter focuses on the different approaches to cross-border evidence in two future manifestatio...
Judicial cooperation in criminal matters in the European Union is to be based on the principle of m...
La présente étude est consacrée à l'entraide européenne aux fins de recherche des preuves pénales. L...
This article analyses the admissibility of evidence gathered by the Polish procedural authorities as...
This book is the last and final part of the project ›European Investigation Order – legal analysis a...
Any effort to gather evidence may prove pointless without ensuring its admissibility. Despite this f...
In April 2010 a group of EU Member States proposed a Directive on the European Investigation Order, ...
This article examines the controversial European Investigation Order - a Belgium-led Member States' ...
ABSTRACT: We emphasize in the present study that, in the context of cross-border crime evolution, it...
The issue of international cooperation in criminal matters has interested legal theorists and practi...
The European Investigation Order (EIO) was supposed to offer a comprehensive solution to cross-borde...
The European Investigation Order (EIO) was supposed to offer a comprehensive solution to cross-borde...
The EIO directive is an important measure for improving EU criminal justice cooperation. Its introdu...
In this paper we have conducted a general examination of the instruments governing the European inst...
The article focuses on the problematic issues of the European Union criminal justice, directly rela...
This chapter focuses on the different approaches to cross-border evidence in two future manifestatio...
Judicial cooperation in criminal matters in the European Union is to be based on the principle of m...
La présente étude est consacrée à l'entraide européenne aux fins de recherche des preuves pénales. L...
This article analyses the admissibility of evidence gathered by the Polish procedural authorities as...
This book is the last and final part of the project ›European Investigation Order – legal analysis a...
Any effort to gather evidence may prove pointless without ensuring its admissibility. Despite this f...