This chapter assesses, on a first approach, the impact that the reception of international or global norms by European Union (EU) law may have on participation opportunities and guarantees that would otherwise be granted to private persons at the EU level. The analysis is premised, inter alia, on the assumption that the varied forms of interaction between the European and international or global regulatory regimes intertwine procedures developed at different regulatory levels and may lead to unitary outcomes. This may require a unitary conception of the procedure when procedural guarantees – in this case participation – are at stake. The difficulties in securing participation in the realm of, in fact, intertwined procedures are explained. T...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
This chapter assesses, on a first approach, the impact that the reception of international or global...
This chapter assesses, on a first approach, the impact that the reception of international or global...
Abstract Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exer...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
This article examines the effects that the reception of decisions of international organizations and...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
This paper examines the effects that the reception of decisions of international organizations and b...
This article examines the effects that the reception of decisions of international organizations and...
The book is a critical legal analysis of the current scope of participation rights in EU law, embedd...
Introduction: This chapter extracts these two competing stories of U.S. administrative process. Aft...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
This chapter assesses, on a first approach, the impact that the reception of international or global...
This chapter assesses, on a first approach, the impact that the reception of international or global...
Abstract Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exer...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
This article examines the effects that the reception of decisions of international organizations and...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
Procedural standards of participation have the capacity to structure and constrain the exercise of a...
This paper examines the effects that the reception of decisions of international organizations and b...
This article examines the effects that the reception of decisions of international organizations and...
The book is a critical legal analysis of the current scope of participation rights in EU law, embedd...
Introduction: This chapter extracts these two competing stories of U.S. administrative process. Aft...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...
The European Union’s legal order is traditionally perceived as largely autonomous, not only internal...