Description
Product ID: | 9781009247948 |
Product Form: | Hardback |
Country of Manufacture: | GB |
Series: | Cambridge Studies in European Law and Policy |
Title: | The Procedural and Organisational Law of the European Court of Justice |
Subtitle: | An Incomplete Transformation |
Authors: | Author: Christoph Krenn |
Page Count: | 202 |
Subjects: | International relations, International relations, Public international law: international organizations and institutions, International organisations & institutions |
Description: | Select Guide Rating The book will be of interest to anyone researching the European Court of Justice. It provides the first encompassing normative framework to assess the development and state of the Court's procedures and decision-making. In university education it can be used at all levels and is particularly suited for interdisciplinary settings. How should judges of the European Court of Justice be selected, who should participate in the Court''s proceedings and how should judgments be drafted? These questions have remained blind spots in the normative literature on the Court. This book aims to address them. It describes a vast, yet incomplete transformation: Originally, the Court was based on a classic international law model of court organisation and decision-making. Gradually, the concern for the effectiveness of EU law led to the reinvention of its procedural and organisational design. The role of the judge was reconceived as that of a neutral expert, an inner circle of participants emerged and the Court became more hierarchical. While these developments have enabled the Court to make EU law uniquely effective, they have also created problems from a democratic perspective. The book argues that it is time to democratise the Court and shows ways to do this. |
Imprint Name: | Cambridge University Press |
Publisher Name: | Cambridge University Press |
Country of Publication: | GB |
Publishing Date: | 2022-09-22 |