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El. knyga: The Protection of Fundamental Rights in the EU After Lisbon

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The changes made by the Lisbon Treaty suggest that its entry into force in December 2009 marks a new stage in the shaping of the EU's commitment to the protection of fundamental rights. This book's concern is to provide an examination of the several (and interlocking) challenges which the Lisbon reforms present. The book not only addresses the fresh and intriguing challenges for the EU, as an entity committed to the protection and promotion of fundamental rights presented by developments 'post-Lisbon,' but also a number of conundrums about the scope and method of protection of fundamental rights in the EU which existed 'pre-Lisbon' and which endure. The book consists of three parts, with the first section concerned with the safeguarding of fundamental rights in Europe's internal market. The second part of the book is entitled 'The Scope of Fundamental Rights in EU Law' and the chapters discuss the reach of fundamental rights and their horizontal dimension. The final section deals with 'The Constitutional Dimension of Fundamental Rights,' analyzing the special relationship between the European Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights, as well as the issue of rights competition between the EU Charter on Fundamental Rights, the European Convention on Human Rights, and national rights catalogues. (Series: Studies of the Oxford Institute of European and Comparative Law - Vol. 15)
Preface v
List of Contributors
ix
Table of Cases
xi
Introduction 1(10)
Sybe de Vries
Ulf Bernitz
Stephen Weatherill
Part I Safeguarding Fundamental Rights in Europe's Internal Market
1 From Economic Rights to Fundamental Rights
11(26)
Stephen Weatherill
2 The Protection of Fundamental Social Rights in Europe after Lisbon: A Question of Conflicts of Interests
37(22)
Catherine Barnard
3 The Protection of Fundamental Rights within Europe's Internal Market after Lisbon -- An Endeavour for More Harmony
59(38)
Sybe A. de Vries
Part II The Scope of Fundamental Rights in EU Law
4 The Reach of Fundamental Rights on Member State Action after Lisbon
97(22)
Xavier Groussot
Laurent Pech
Gunnar Thor Petursson
5 An End to the Possibilities -- on Horizontal Liability in Laval and the Limits of Judicial Rights Protection
119(20)
Martin Mork
6 Horizontal Effects of Private Rights Vested by Union Law on Damages to be Paid by another private Party: The Laval Case as Model
139(14)
Ulf Bernitz
Part III The Constitutional Dimension of Fundamental Rights
7 The Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Court of Human Rights after Lisbon
153(28)
Sionaidh Douglas-Scott
8 Competing Rights?
181(26)
Iain Cameron
Conference Report 207(8)
Eva Suzanne Lachnit
Index 215
Sybe de Vries is Associate Professor of European Law and the Jean Monnet Chair in EU Single Market Law and Fundamental Rights at the Europa Institute, Utrecht University. Ulf Bernitz is Professor of European Law at the University of Stockholm and a Senior Associate Fellow of St Hilda“s College, Oxford. Stephen Weatherill is Jacques Delors Professor of European Law at Oxford University and a Fellow of Somerville College.