Author (Person) | Isenbaert, Mathieu |
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Series Title | EC Tax Review |
Series Details | Vol.18, No.6, December 2009, p264-278 |
Publication Date | December 2009 |
ISSN | 0928-2750 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
Abstract: (1) What significance, if any, does the concept of ‘sovereignty’ have in the contemporary supranational environment of the European Union/European Community? (2) Within such contemporary meaning, can the quality of ‘sovereignty’ with regard to direct taxation be considered to have remained with the Member States, has it been acquired by the European Union/European Community or has it been shared by the Member States and the Union/Community level? (3) What are the normative implications of the answer to the previous question and have these normative implications been respected by the states and supra-state actors? All too often, tax scholars equate ‘sovereignty’ with the concepts of ‘competence’ or of ‘jurisdiction’. With regard to acquiring a thorough understanding of the ‘sovereignty’ concept, however, it is necessary to abolish a tax legal perspective altogether and venture into the field of political sciences. An analysis of the non-legal background of the concept ‘sovereignty’ will show that it is defendable to confer an epistemic and normative significance to the ‘sovereignty’ concept that goes beyond the strictly legal concepts of ‘competence’ or ‘jurisdiction’. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.kluwerlawonline.com/index.php?area=Journals |
Subject Categories | Law, Taxation |
Countries / Regions | Europe |