|
Abstract:
The Swedish Network for European Legal Studies has launched a new annual publication "Swedish Studies in European Law", which will act as a forum for the publication of studies on European law by Swedish scholars, containing peer-reviewed articles aimed at spreading Swedish legal research on European law to a wide international audience. The articles in the volume are concerned with European law, its development, impact and reform; furthermore they are original, analytical contributions to doctrinal debates and questions, by legal researchers mainly, but not exclusively, connected with the Swedish universities.
Contents:
Grey zones, legitimacy deficits and boomerang effects: on the implications of extending the acquis to Central and Eastern Europe - Antonina Bakardjieva Engelbrekt;
The duty of supreme courts to refer cases to the ECJ: the Commission’s action against Sweden - Ulf Bernitz;
Ten years within the EU: labour law in Sweden and Finland following EU accession - Niclas Bruun & Jonas Malmberg;
Damages for violations of ECHR rights: the Swedish example - Iain Cameron;
The free movement of services in conflict with the Swedish industrial relations model – or was it the other way around? - Örjan Edström;
Restrictive use of award criteria in public procurement - Lars Henriksson;
Citizenship law: no longer exclusive national competence towards individual European Union membership based on domicile? - Hedvig Lokrantz Bernitz;
Constructing comparability: the reasoning of the ECJ on equality in taxation - Robert Påhlsson;
On the emerging obligation for Member State authorities to supervise and enforce EC state aid law, and the resulting need to consider decentralisation - Ingeborg Simonsson;
Access to justice in the EU: knocking on heaven’s door? - Ola Zetterquist;
Who wags who? The EU and the use of military force in a global context - Inger Österdahl.
|