Contract Law of the Internal Market
The thematic argument that forms the core of this book holds that it is important in understanding the European Union’s impact on private and especially contract law that the European Union has only a limited competence conferred by its founding Treaties, but that, largely as a consequence of the Court’s generous reading of the scope of the internal market, those limits are less of a restraint than may initially be supposed and that, moreover, pursuit of, in short, social justice is less constitutionally elusive than is often alleged.
It provides an authoritative account of the actual and possible scope of the European Union’s role and also interrogates the question whether the European Union’s influence on private and especially contract law is benign or disruptive, in particular in the context of that constitutionally limited competence. This is timely, not least because the Commission’s review of contract law, initiated in 2001, has still not run its course and may never do so. It is a continuing process. And the constitutional dimension has tended to be neglected.
The book insists on the need for awareness of a complex interaction of often ambiguous constitutional rules, often politically inconsistent institutional rhythms and often evasive judicial pronouncements. And it shows how the European Union’s role is not simply a niche area that has grown erratically but ultimately remains on the edges of the European Union's core public law activities, but rather that the rise of European Union private and especially contract law asks some vividly important questions about the principle and practice of conferred competence and about the choice of priorities in market regulation as protective instincts and deregulatory impulses collide. The adjustments made by the Treaty of Lisbon, especially but not only the grant of binding effect to the Charter of Fundamental Rights, have sharpened the interest.
Contract Law of the Internal Market is written for both private and EU lawyers.
“M. Weatherill invite les juristes à développer une double culture en droit des contrats et en droit européen, le seul moyen de porter un regard juste sur le droit européen des contrats. Là encore, on ne pourra que s’en féliciter. »
Review RTDEur., 2017, 1, p. V.
‘[...] a very thorough overview of the interests at stake in the regulation of European contract law. Compulsory reading for private lawyers who want to be (or remain) aware of the underlying interests in this area, and EU law specialists who are not yet or insufficiently familiar with European contract law.’
Vanessa Mak in (2017) 188
Type of product | Book |
---|---|
Format | Paperback |
EAN / ISSN | 9781780682402 / 9781780687506 |
Weight | 480 g |
Status | Available |
Number of pages | xxii + 274 p. |
Access to exercice | No |
Publisher | Intersentia |
Language | English |
Publication Date | Jul 25, 2016 |
Available on Strada Belgique | No |
Available on Strada Europe | No |
Available on Strada Luxembourg | No |
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- Contents
- The Landscape of Contract Law in the EU
- Contractual Autonomy and National Contract Law in the Internal Market
- The EU as Source of Contract Law
- Themes and Principles in the EU's Contract Law Acquis
- Improving the Regulatory Environment
- Models of Harmonisation: Maximum or Minimum
- Measuring the Effects of the Contract Law of the Internal Market
- Index