The application of EC law by national courts : the free movement of goods
- Title
- The application of EC law by national courts : the free movement of goods / Malcolm A. Jarvis.
- Published by
- Oxford : Clarendon Press ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1998.
- Author
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Status | Format | Access | Call number | Item location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Status | FormatText | AccessUse in library | Call numberKJE5177 .J37 1998 | Item locationOff-site |
Details
- Description
- lxviii, 472 pages; 24 cm
- Summary
- This book examines the application of European Community law by the national courts and assesses their increasing importance in the judicial architecture of the Community. Jarvis focuses on the rules of the EC Treaty concerning the free movement of goods (Articles 30 to 36), one of the largest and most mature areas of substantive EC law. He has undertaken an exhaustive examination of relevant case law from the national courts of the United Kingdom, France and the Netherlands, while also covering the most significant developments in the courts of other Member States. This ambitious book will be welcomed as a significant advance in our growing understanding of the importance of national courts in the EC legal order.
- Subject
- Free trade > European Union countries
- International and municipal law > European Union countries
- UE/CE Droit
- UE/CE Cour de justice
- UE/CE Etats membres
- Libre circulation des marchandises
- Jurisprudence
- Droit national
- Application des lois
- Analyse comparative
- Free trade
- International and municipal law
- Europees recht
- Rechtspraak
- Vrij verkeer van goederen
- European Union
- Goods
- Free movement
- Community law and national law
- Libre-échange > Pays de l'Union européenne
- Droit européen et droit interne
- Droit européen > Interprétation
- Royaume-Uni
- Pays-Bas
- France
- European Union countries
- Contents
- Machine derived contents note: 1. Introduction -- 2. Article 30 and imports -- 3. Actually or potentially hindering intra-community trade -- 4. Article 34 and exports -- 5. Reverse discrimination and purely national methods -- 6. The rule of reason -- 7. Article 36 grounds of justification -- 8. Intellectual Property Rights -- 9. Completion of the internal market and the effect of community harmonisation legislation -- 10. Remedies for breach of the free movement of goods rules before national courts -- 11. Preliminary references to the ECJ under article 177 -- 12. Conclusion.
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (p. [458]-467) and index.