Van Gend en Loos established the conceptual premises of a crucial issue to shape the relationships between the European Union and international law: the function of direct effect as a powerful instrument to guarantee that the rules of one system are complied with in another legal order. However, if compared with direct effect of EU legal rules, the issue of the effects of EU international agreements is made more complicated by the combination of the more traditional question of the self- executing character of international agreement provisions and the narrow meaning of direct effect. The former issue, strongly affected by the technique of incorporation and the rank of international law obligations within the incorporating legal order, goes...
The purpose of this contribution is to explore the extent to which the direct effect doctrine, dev...
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 founding Treaties of the European Union do not explicitly regulate the legal status or the inter...
This article looks at a less discussed topic in European legal scholarship: the horizontal direct ef...
none1noAlthough the clear-cut affirmation of an automatic incorporation of international law into th...
This article assesses how, fifty years after the ECJ delivered its judgment in Van Gend and Loos (VG...
Article 344 TFEU forbids Member States to pursue any other means of dispute settlement, when issues ...
The ECJ has in various occasions insisted on the existence of dispute settlement mechanisms when det...
This article revisits the present and future of the direct effect principle and submits solutions fo...
One of the most difficult problems in the study of international law is determining when a rule of ...
The criteria of direct effect of agreements concluded by the European Community have not yet been ex...
Introduction. The European Union’s external action is not only defined by its influence on internat...
The rules on invoking EU norms before the Court of Justice and Member State courts are at the core o...
The European Community has had a decidedly significant impact upon the legal systems of the Member S...
The purpose of this contribution is to explore the extent to which the direct effect doctrine, dev...
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 founding Treaties of the European Union do not explicitly regulate the legal status or the inter...
This article looks at a less discussed topic in European legal scholarship: the horizontal direct ef...
none1noAlthough the clear-cut affirmation of an automatic incorporation of international law into th...
This article assesses how, fifty years after the ECJ delivered its judgment in Van Gend and Loos (VG...
Article 344 TFEU forbids Member States to pursue any other means of dispute settlement, when issues ...
The ECJ has in various occasions insisted on the existence of dispute settlement mechanisms when det...
This article revisits the present and future of the direct effect principle and submits solutions fo...
One of the most difficult problems in the study of international law is determining when a rule of ...
The criteria of direct effect of agreements concluded by the European Community have not yet been ex...
Introduction. The European Union’s external action is not only defined by its influence on internat...
The rules on invoking EU norms before the Court of Justice and Member State courts are at the core o...
The European Community has had a decidedly significant impact upon the legal systems of the Member S...
The purpose of this contribution is to explore the extent to which the direct effect doctrine, dev...
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...