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European Law | Summary and lesson notes | UC Leuven-Limburg | 2025/26

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full summary of lesson notes and relevant paragraphs in the case law. Summary in English such as the exam

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European law
1/ European integration

1/1 Historical development
1945 – San Francisco Conference
 End of WW2 – Adolf Hitler commits suicide
 Story started in the ruins of WW2
 After this war we started to think how do we return to normality

1946 – Let Europe arise
 Prime minister Churchill gave a speech to the university of Zurich – ‘let
Europe arise’ speach
 We need a council for Europe, this council should perform under the
wings of the united nations to give Europe structure again
 Regional cooperative body = the Council of Europe
 = a united states of Europe
 What we would later call European integration

1949 – Schuman plan
 Political parties: right – Jean Monet / Left: mr Schuman
 Jean Monnet introduces the Schuman plan
 Named after French Finance Minister Robert Schuman
 Plan: prevent further war between France and Germany
 Make war unthinkable and materially impossible

1951 – Treaty of Paris
 Schuman plan led to the treaty of Paris
 Start of what we call European integration
 = states working together, process of cooperation
 Cooperation was on the materials of fear: industrial level, economic
level, financial level, political level, cultural level, social level and
legal level
 Established: European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)
 These were the main sources that you need for war and it was the
plan to make war impossible
 Supervised by a high authority
 States give away parts of sovereign control to the high
authority to control this cooperation
 Benelux, France, Italy and Germany – UK NOT because it
opposed the idea of a high authority
 Treaty came into force in 1952




1

,1955 – Spaak report
 Belgian Foreign Minister = Paul-Henri Spaak
 Suggested that there should be integration in a limited number of
sectors (so further then only cole and steel, he’s a fan of European
integration)
 Set up an international meeting in Italy
 He was asked to examine the establishment of a common
market – report was published in 1956 – laid the basis for the
Treaty Establishing the European Economic Community
(EEC Treaty)

1957 – Treaties of Rome
 EEC
 Remarkable features: institutional arrangements
 The community was build around four institutions:
 A Commission = a body of officials independent from the
member states, responsible for porposing legislation
 An assembly (later to develop into European Parliament)
 A Council (where national governments were represented)
 A Court of Justice (to rule on whether member states or
institutions of the EEC had complied with EEC law)
 EURATOM – stefje does not care about this 🤓
 Both treaties entered into force in 1958

1958 – Charles de Gaulle becomes president of France
 He wanted a intergovernmental Europe
 His vision: European integration = intergovernmental
 The supranational features of the EEC were a threat

1961 – UK wanted to join EEC
 They saw that they were economically isolated because they didn’t join
the EEC Treaty
 BUT both times they asked to join the EEC De Gaulle (France) denied
them
 Because France used their veto here, they were left isolated until
De Gaulle resigned

1963 – Van Gend & Loos (European Court of Justice)
Facts: Van Gend & Loos a dutch transport company, was charged an import
duty on goods imported from Germany by the Dutch authorities – Van Gend &
Loos considered this a breach of article 30 TFEU – Van Gend & Loos issued this
before the Dutch tax Court, which asked the European Court of Justice if a party
could invoke and rely on treaty provisions in proceedings before a national
court. The Court said yes. The Court was asserting the powser of what was then
at the time EEC law over national law
 Intergovernmentalism <> supranationalism
 Direct effect
 A new legal order

1973 – UK, Denmark and Ireland become members of the EEC




2

,1984 – appointment of a new Commission
 Headed by: Minister Jacques Delors
 4 choices for national governments:
 Monetary policy
 Foreign policy and defence
 The internal market
 All agreed that this was the logical way forward
 A free market without boundaries
 Institutional reform

1986 – SEA
 Single European Act
 Established the European Council
 Brings together the heads of state, or the governments of the
member states and the President of the Commission of the
European Communities
 This is NOT the Council of Europe

1989 – Collapse of the Berlin Wall

-Realization there should be more cooperation (Kohl and Mitterrand)-

1992 – Treaty of Maastricht
 This is the treaty of the European Union (TEU) = you need a European
union
 Proclaimed the EU as a political project
 Member states established a European Union
 Entered into force in 1993 (before the EEC now became EC
(=European Community))

1997 – Treaty of Amsterdam
 Integrated the Schengen Agreements
 Letting go of internal borders and creating an external border

2001 – Treaty of Nice and Convention on the future of Europe
 Treaty of Nice
 Review the composition and functioning of the institutions
cumulated in 2001
 Convention on the future of Europe
 In Laken
 Wanted to make a constitution for the EU to turn it into a
superstate

2004 – Constitutional treaty and Impasse
 Constitutional treaty
 France and the Netherlands did not like this idea so no constitution
boehoe

3

,  2005 European integration had reached an impasse (= a dead end)

2007 – Treaty of Lisbon: TEU and TFEU
 Member states committed to a new treaty
 Startpoint: Constitutional Treaty
 Treaty of Lisbon
 Was actually the constitution but they took out some constitutional
elements
 What the EU is, what it did and how it did it
 Lead to two treaties: TEU and TFEU (legal framework of the
European Union)



2/ Legal framework

2/1 Primary EU law
TEU and TFEU
 Give power to the institutions of the union to make secondary EU law

2/2 Secondary EU law
Article 288 TFEU – definition

To exercise the Union’s competences, the institutions shall adopt regulations,
directives, decisions, recommendations and opinions (= secondary law)
 Regulation: shall have general application + binding in its entirety +
directly applicable
 Directive: binding + leaves the choice to the national authorities of form
and methods
 Decision: binding in its entirety + specifies those to whom it is addressed
(only binding for them)
 Recommendations and opinions: no binding force

2/3 Other sources
Case law
 Of the Court of Justice of the European Union

Legal doctrine

2/4 Finding EU-law?
EUR-lex




4

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