Contents:
Preface: Vision, Essence and Narratives of General Principles and European Private Law: An Introduction - Ulf Bernitz, Xavier Groussot & Felix Schulyok
Part I: Methodology in the Elaboration of Private Law Principles
1. Private Law Principles, Pluralism and Perfectionism - Martijn W. Hesselink
2. General Legal Principles Navigating Space and Time - Joxerramon Bengoetxea
3. Emerging European General Principles in Private Law - John Temple Lang
Part II: The Constitutionalization of Private Autonomy
4. Regulated Autonomy between Market Freedoms and Fundamental Rights in the Case Law of the CJEU - Guido Comparato & Hans-W. Micklitz
5. European Law versus Private Law: Transformation or Deformation of the Paradigm? - Marek Safjan
6. Horizontal Effect of Fundamental Rights: In Search of Social Justice or Private Autonomy in EU Law? - Dorota Leczykiewicz
Part III: Horizontal Direct Effect
7. The Concept of (Direct and Indirect) Horizontal Effect of EU Law:The Terminology of European Law Scholars and of Private Law Scholars Compared - Arthur Hartkamp
8. The Expectation of Legal Certainty and Horizontal Effect of EU Law - Juha Raitio
9. Horizontal Effect of General Principles: Bold Rulings and Fine Distinctions - Takis Tridimas
10. General Principles and the Charter in Private Law Relationships:Constructive and Critical Input from Private Law - Carla Sieburgh
11. The Horizontal Direct Effect of the Four Freedoms: From a Hodgepodge of Cases to a Seamless Web of Judicial Protection in the EU Single Market? - Sybe de Vries & Robert van Mastrigt
12. What Purpose Does Article 16 of the Charter Serve? - Peter Oliver
13. The Principle of Effectiveness and EU Private Law - Norbert Reich
14. Remedies under the EU Charter in the Context of Disputes Arising in Private Law - Angela Ward
Part IV: Competition Law and General Principles
15. From Regulation 17/62 to Article 52 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights - Ian S.Forrester
16. Judicial Review after Menarini: Any Need for Reform of the EU System? - Helene Andersson
17. Data Mirroring during Dawn-Raids: Right to Judicial Review - Ingeborg Simonsson
18. How General Should General Principles Be? Ne Bis in Idem in EU Competition Law - Wouter Devroe
This book addresses and highlights the core issues concerning general principles of EU law and their relationship with and impact on private law. With the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty, the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights became a legally binding source of primary law and highlights, together with the General Principles of EU law, the importance of fundamental rights in the legal system of the Union. This increased visibility means that private parties have begun to rely on fundamental rights arguments in proceedings in front of national courts and Union courts more and more often.
Amongst many other issues this development brings important questions relating to the effects of EU fundamental rights on private law to the forefront. After an introductory chapter by the editors the following four overarching themes provide the structure of this book and broadly reflect the approaches discussed in its eighteen essays:
- the methodology and theory in the elaboration of new general principles of EU law;
- the constitutionalization of private autonomy in EU law;
- issues of horizontal direct effect viewed from conceptual, sectoral and remedial perspectives; and
- the relationship between general principles and competition law.
This book reflects the continuous relevance and the need to re-examine the effects and the status of general principles of EU law, which have been dealt with already twice before (in 1999 and 2007) by the group that has compiled the present volume, the Swedish Network for European Legal Studies. The discussion that emerges is, as before, of immense significance both for theoretical legal studies and for legal practice. The eighteen essays here printed are all final author-edited versions of papers first presented at the Network’s conference in Stockholm in November 2012. The authors include both eminent, well-known experts, and representatives of a new generation of younger scholars in the field.
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