EU Employment Law: From Rome to Amsterdam and Beyond
Autor Professor Jeff Kenneren Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 dec 2002
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781901362695
ISBN-10: 1901362698
Pagini: 648
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1901362698
Pagini: 648
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
This book traces the evolution of European Union employment law and social policy from its essentially economic origins in the Treaty of Rome through to the emerging themes post-Amsterdam.
Notă biografică
Jeff Kenner is Senior Lecturer in European Law at the University of Nottingham.
Cuprins
1 The Emergence of the Social Dimension 2 The Community's 'New Deal' 3 The Single European Act-Catalyst for Action I4 The Community 'Social Charter'-Catalyst for Action II5 Community Social Legislation in the Era of the Social Charter6 The Treaty on European Union: Transition or Transformation?7 From Maastricht to Amsterdam-Reshaping the European Social Model 8 The Treaty of Amsterdam-An Overview9 Combating Discrimination-New Concepts, New Laws, New Hierarchies?10 Reconceptualising Sex Equality and Market Integration in the Court of Justice11 The European Employment Strategy-Reinventing Social Policy Governance? 12 The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights-Towards a European Social Constitution?
Recenzii
This is an original book.It searches for the soul of European employment law.this is an excellent book, recommended reading for those who want to reflect upon the meaning, the significance and the relevance of European Labour Law after 50 years and beyond.
This is a meticulous historical account of EU employment law. Kenner's chronological approach is not replicated in other standard texts on EU social policy and is ultimately one which proves rewarding insofar as it sets various initiatives in context. Through this tour of the different stages of EU constitutional development, he demonstrates the ways in which social, economic and employment imperatives have interacted. In doing so, he provides us with the means to understand present policy and current proposals for reform.
Jeff Kenner's book, a successful combination of the analytical and explanatory attitude of a manual and the reconstructive approach of a theoretical inquiry, offers a complete and thorough synopsis of the long and complex historical experience of Community employment law from its origins to date.
The work is rich both in legal analysis and in the kind of institutional detail that is necessary in order to understand the background to the development of the law. The reader will find here detailed doctrinal explanations of the various Treaty provisions, directives and court decisions that have shaped the law at various points, alongside accounts of the coalition-building and tactical manoeuvring that lay behind the key legislative developments. The book,can be read as a legal treatise, but it differs from most other works on EU employment law by attempting to place the law's evolution in the context of a wider political and institutional process of policy formation. It thereby makes an innovative and important contribution to the field of European legal studies.
This is a meticulous historical account of EU employment law. Kenner's chronological approach is not replicated in other standard texts on EU social policy and is ultimately one which proves rewarding insofar as it sets various initiatives in context. Through this tour of the different stages of EU constitutional development, he demonstrates the ways in which social, economic and employment imperatives have interacted. In doing so, he provides us with the means to understand present policy and current proposals for reform.
Jeff Kenner's book, a successful combination of the analytical and explanatory attitude of a manual and the reconstructive approach of a theoretical inquiry, offers a complete and thorough synopsis of the long and complex historical experience of Community employment law from its origins to date.
The work is rich both in legal analysis and in the kind of institutional detail that is necessary in order to understand the background to the development of the law. The reader will find here detailed doctrinal explanations of the various Treaty provisions, directives and court decisions that have shaped the law at various points, alongside accounts of the coalition-building and tactical manoeuvring that lay behind the key legislative developments. The book,can be read as a legal treatise, but it differs from most other works on EU employment law by attempting to place the law's evolution in the context of a wider political and institutional process of policy formation. It thereby makes an innovative and important contribution to the field of European legal studies.
Descriere
This book traces the evolution of EU employment law and social policy from the Treaty of Rome through to the emerging themes post-Amsterdam.