Author (Person) | Santa Maria, Alberto |
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Publisher | Kluwer Law International |
Publication Date | December 2013 |
ISBN | 978-90-411-4558-1 |
Content Type | Textbook | Monograph |
The Third Edition of this well-known book comes only four years after the Second Edition because so much has happened in Europe and the world since 2009 that reviewing international economic and financial issues is certainly appropriate. Along with the world crisis, the European monetary crisis has also highlighted the shortcomings in the European structure that seems incapable, in its present complexity, of resolving the apparently intractable problems it confronts. This book’s author is uncompromising: either we have the courage to establish profound, constitutional reforms aimed at renewing the European Union in the collective imagination, or we risk contenting ourselves with merely an economic community with a far-from-ideal single market where all actors, individuals, and enterprises are guaranteed nothing beyond the four basic freedoms. Emphasizing the complex legal regime affecting undertakings in Europe today, open to the whole world and subject as they are to ever-new situations governed by rules derived from both the EC Treaty and from WTO/GATT obligations, Professor Santa Maria presents a legal analysis of the prominence of corporate and business enterprises in what many theorists see as the intrinsic ‘internationality’ of social activity in the current era. In the course of its intensive discussion, the book disentangles the complex interrelations among a vast array of economic factors, including the following: + the right of establishment and the free provision of services by business companies; + the harmonization of company laws; + the regulation of international trade; + how the EU is facing the global economic and financial crisis; + how the EU institutions’ powers and duties can be adequately reallocated; + the widespread mistrust towards Member States that appear favoured (or less damaged) by the current crisis; + the potential EU contribution to reform of the IMF’s organization and substantive rules; + advantages lawfully acquired by, and unlawful conduct of, multinational enterprises; + transfer pricing in intragroup transactions; + international cooperation in the supervision of banking groups; + ‘corporate social responsibility’ and ‘codes of conduct’; and + the antitrust rules of EU in the globalization era. State aid between competition law and the non-discrimination principle. The analysis recognizes the propelling role of the European Court of Justice in the development of European economic law – including the ‘proportional’ exercise of control in the court’s recent case-law – as well as the Commission’s responsibility for ‘managing’ European trade. Content: + Preface. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.kluwerlaw.com/ |
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Subject Categories | Economic and Financial Affairs, Internal Markets |
Countries / Regions | Europe |