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Notas de lectura

EU Law Revision Notes - all topics

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In depth, easy to understand, colourful EU law notes to help with all coursework. Also provides advice on how to answer the coursework.

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Subido en
16 de abril de 2025
Número de páginas
25
Escrito en
2024/2025
Tipo
Notas de lectura
Profesor(es)
Joshua eve
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EU Law Week 1 – Lecture Notes
Part 1: Historical Overview
What is the EU?
- An intergovernmental organisation
- A supranational entity
- A sui generis entity
The birth of the EU: The Founding Treaties
1951: European Coal and Steel Community set up by 6 founding Member States.
1957: The same six Member States sign the Treaties of Rome, setting up the EEC
and the European Atomic Energy Community.
Timeline of milestones
1973: Communities expand to 9 member states and introduce more common
policies.
1979: First direct elections to the European Parliament.
1986: Single European Act enters into force.
1992: European single market becomes a reality.
1993: Treaty of Maastricht establishes the European Union.
2002: Euro comes into circulation
2004: 5th Enlargement – EU MS rise from 15 to 25
2008: Lisbon Treaty comes into force.
2021: Brexit is complete.


EU Institutions – Article 13 (1) TEU
- European Commission
- Council of the European Union
- European Council
- European Parliament
- Court of Justice of the EU
- European Central Bank
EU and separation of powers
 The EU does not conform to a rigid principle of separation of powers (like
many national systems).
 Instead EU institutions operate in an institutional framework set up by
Article 13 TEU (promote its values, advance its objectives, serve its
interests).
 EU institutions are expected to share powers based on the principle of
inter institutional balance.

,European Commission: Introduction
Four main roles:
1. Legislative – initiate legislation, develop legislative plan and agenda for
any single year, develops general policy strategy,
2. Executive – establishment of the EU budget, some control over
expenditure, represents the EU on the international stage
3. Judicial – ensure the application of Treaties & secondary legislation,
4. Powers – take decision, conduct investigations, impose penalties in the
area of completion law.
Council of the EU
- Represents the interests of Member States.
- 27 member states
- Each Member State will send a minister depending on the matter at stake.
- Pass EU laws, jointly with the EP.
- Coordinate broad policies, conclude international agreements, approve the
EU’s budget, determine EU’s common foreign and security policy,
cooperate with national courts.
- Defines the general political directions and priorities of the EU
- Can initiate major changes to treaties and the institutional structure of the
EU.
Voting
- Simple majority (14 member states vote in favour)
- Qualified majority (55% of member states, representing at least 65% of
the EU population, vote in favour)
- Unanimous votes (all votes in favour).
European Parliament
1. Legislative – the EP will pass EU law jointly with council which has been
extended to include sensitive areas – agriculture, services, asylum and
immigration.
2. Supervisory – holding other EU institutions to account, parliament has the
power to dismiss whole commission
3. Budgetary authority – EP may reject budget, may amend any part of the
draft budget


Court of Justice
- Interpretation of the Treaties and Secondary Legislation
- Ensures EU law is applied and observed
- Reviews validity of EU secondary legislation
- Exercises indirect judicial control by providing a preliminary ruling for
domestic courts.


EU Law making

, Ordinary Legislative Procedure:
- The European Commission submits a proposal to the council and the EP.
- The council and EP adopt a legislative proposal either at the first reading
or second reading.
- If the two institutions do not reach an agreement after the second reading,
a conciliation committee is convened.
- If the text agreed by the conciliation committee is acceptable to both
institutions at the third reading, the legislative act is adopted.
Key points:
- Adoption of a legislative act under OLP requires complete agreement of EP
and Council – no agreement = no law!
- Three readings by EP and Council – different voting thresholds
- Commissions agreement also plays a role
- EP and council can prevent adoption of legislation at different stages by
not giving assent.
- The emphasis throughout the procedure is on compromise and dialogue,
to facilitate the successful passage of the legislative act.
BREXIT and UK-EU Relationship
- UK entered EU in 1973
- BREXIT: UK’s withdrawal from the European Union
- Economy: Europe is Britain’s most important export market and its biggest
source of foreign investment.
- EU law remains relevant for the UK in the post Brexit era:
 EU legislation as it applied to the UK on 31 December 2020 is now
part of the UK domestic legislation
 UK-EU Partnership: UK courts have a duty to interpret UK law in line
with the UK-EU agreements
 UK-EU Withdrawal agreement: EU law will remain applicable in the
UK in certain fields (e.g. to ensure continuation of Northern Ireland
protocol).
EU Week 2 notes week 2 – The Perspective of the CJEU
Focus on EU and its member states
EU law trumps national law > EU law sits at the top (hierarchal).
Primacy – how much sovereignty the member states of the EU retain
and how much they have transferred to the European Union.
Constitutional Pluralism – 2 systems of law (EU law and national
constitutions) can co-exist in a system is not hierarchical.
EU takes priority when the two systems of law exist but not having
sovereignty over the member states.


Supremacy of EU Law: The Perspective of the CJEU
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