Differentiation in European Union law

Differentiation in European Union law

Differentiation in European Union law

Law of Europe > Regional organization and integration (Europe) > The European Communities. Community law > Theory and methodology of uniform law development. Integration of law > Community law and municipal law > Member nations and integration of law > General

Edition Details

  • Creator or Attribution (Responsibility): Filip Tuytschaever
  • Language: English
  • Jurisdiction(s): England
  • Publication Information: Oxford [England] ; Portland, Or. : Hart Pub., 1999
  • Material: Internet resource
  • Type: Book, Internet Resource
  • Permalink: http://books.lawlegal.eu/differentiation-in-european-union-law/ (Stable identifier)

Additional Format

Online version: Tuytschaeuer, Filip. Differentiation in European Union law. Oxford: Hart, 1999 (OCoLC)606203428 Online version: Tuytschaeuer, Filip. Differentiation in European Union law. Oxford: Hart, 1999 (OCoLC)607314472

Short Description

XXXIV, 298 pages ; 24 cm

Purpose and Intended Audience

Useful for students learning an area of law, Differentiation in European Union law is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.

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Bibliographic information

  • Publisher: Hart Pub.
  • Responsable Person: Filip Tuytschaever.
  • Publication Date: 1999
  • Country/State: England
  • Number of Editions: 11 editions
  • First edition Date: 1999
  • Last edition Date: 1999
  • Languages: English
  • Library of Congress Code: KJE969
  • Dewey Code: 341.2422
  • ISBN: 1841130729 9781841130729
  • OCLC: 43340717

Main Contents

From Rome to Maastrict – a historical overview of differentiation: the Treaty of Rome; the Single European Act; the Treaty on European Union. From Maastrict to Amsterdam – differentiation and the 1996 IGC: differentiation in the run-up to the 1996 IGC; the 1996 IGC discussion on differentiation. Differentiation and the Treaty of Amsterdam: EC; Title V TEU; Title VI TEU; differentiated integration of the Schengen acquis into the EU framework. Differentiation and the principle of non-discrimination: what is discrimination?; the comparability test; the justification test; differentiation and proportionality; differentiation and objective justification. A categorisation of differentiation: parameters; categories – actual differentiation, secondary law, potential differentiation; primary law – general, specific; secondary law – general, specific. “Europe a la carte – legal limits to a multi-speed Europe with various groupings”: multi-speed; a la carte; case study – differentiation and the EC's external relations; variable geometry. Differentiation in context: causes of differentiation; objectives of differentiation; consequences of differentiation. Annexes: tables of equivalences; 1996 IGC documents on differentiation.

Summary Note

This book, adopting a law in context approach, deals with the controversial development of increased differentiation in European Union law.

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