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From Van Gend en Loos and Costa v ENEL to Cassis de Dijon and Consten and Grundig, Landmark Cases in EU Law explores the most important and well-known EU law cases in two volumes. These volumes show how the European Court of Justice has played a fundamental role in the construction of the European Union in the past 70 years. Many EU ‘landmark’ cases have been controversial, yet no-one can deny that they have been essential in defining the Union legal order as we find it today.Volume 2 explores the ‘substantive’ cases that have shaped the Union’s internal market, its competition law as well as its internal and external policies. Each of the twenty cases within this volume is placed in its historical and doctrinal context, and each chapter also presents the history of its reception by the Court and academia.
Paul Craig is Emeritus Professor of English Law at St John’s College, Oxford, UK.Robert Schütze is Professor of European Union and Comparative Public Law at Durham University, UK, and LUISS (Rome), Italy.
Introduction, Paul Craig (University of Oxford, UK) and Robert Schütze (Durham University, UK)Part A: The Free Movement of Goods and Services1. Dassonville and Non-Tariff Barriers to Trade, Peter Oliver (ULB Centre de Droit Européen, Belgium)2. Cassis de Dijon and the Principle of Mutual Recognition, Jukka Snell (University of Turku, Finland)3. Keck and Mithouard: The Limits of Free Movement Law, Stephen Weatherill (University of Oxford, UK)4. To Keck and Back: Alpine Investments and Free Movement of Services, Barend van Leeuwen (Durham University, UK)5. Laval and Beyond: Collective Labour Rights and Free Movement of Services, Silvana Sciarra (University of Firenze, Italy) and Lorenzo Cecchetti (KU Leuven, Belgium)Part B: The Free Movement of Persons and EU Citizenship6. Bosman and the Horizontal Direct Effect of Free Movement, Stefaan Van den Bogaert (Leiden Law School, the Netherlands)7. Gebhard as a Cross-Freedom Benchmark, Vassilis Hatzopoulos (Panteion University, Greece)8. Baumbast and the Rise of EU Citizenship, Daniel Thym (University of Konstanz, Germany)9. Ruiz Zambrano and the Essential Core of Union Citizenship, Niamh Nic Shuibhne (University of Edinburgh, UK)10. Centros and the Free Movement of Companies, Wolf-Georg Ringe (University of Hamburg, Germany)Part C: Competition Law and the Internal Market11. Consten and Grundig and Vertical Agreements, Alison Jones (King’s College London, UK)12. Métropole Télévision and the Rule of Reason, Okeoghene Odudu (University of Cambridge, UK)13. Hoffmann-La Roche and the Notion of Abuse, Pablo Ibáñez Colomo (London School of Economics, UK)14. Continental Can and the Birth of Merger Control, Giorgio Monti (Tilburg University, the Netherlands)15. Twenty Years Later: Is Altmark a Landmark Decision in EU State Aid Law? Andrea Biondi (European Court for Justice)Part D: Internal and External Union Policies16. EU Criminal Law as Constitutional Law: Melloni and its Aftermath, Valsamis Mitsilegas (University of Liverpool, UK)17. The Taricco Saga: When Direct Effect Meets the Principle of Legality in Criminal Matters, Daniele Gallo (Luiss University, Italy)18. Pringle and its Legacy for Economic and Monetary Union, Alicia Hinarejos (McGull University, Canada)19. Bilka and EU Antidiscrimination Law, Philippa Watson (Essex Court Chambers, UK)20. Opinion 1/94 and the Common Commercial Policy, Andrés Delgado Casteleiro (CUNEF Universidad, Spain)
Paul Craig, Paul Craig, Herwig Hofmann, Jens-Peter Schneider, Jacques Ziller, Oxford) Craig, Paul (Professor of English Law, Professor of English Law, St John's College, University of Luxembourg) Hofmann, Herwig (Professor of European and Transnational Public Law, Professor of European and Transnational Public Law, University of Freiburg) Schneider, Jens-Peter (Legal Advisor of the Rector Chair for Public Law, Legal Advisor of the Rector Chair for Public Law, University of Pavia) Ziller, Jacques (Professor of European Union Law, Professor of European Union Law