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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in European Law
The European Economic Community: The Right Of Member State Withdrawal, John A. Hill
The European Economic Community: The Right Of Member State Withdrawal, John A. Hill
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Unlawful Discrimination In Employment--An Outline Of The European Community Rules And Case-Law, Julian Currall
Unlawful Discrimination In Employment--An Outline Of The European Community Rules And Case-Law, Julian Currall
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Unlawful Discrimination In Employment--International Law And Community Law: Their Interrelationship With Domestic Law, Elaine Vogel-Polsky
Unlawful Discrimination In Employment--International Law And Community Law: Their Interrelationship With Domestic Law, Elaine Vogel-Polsky
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
A Commentary On The Harmonization Of European Private Law, George A. Bermann
A Commentary On The Harmonization Of European Private Law, George A. Bermann
Faculty Scholarship
The idea behind bringing together these papers on harmonization in three such distinct fields as contract, copyright and telecommunications, and securities law must be that they may have something to tell us generally about the processes of harmonization in European private law. Each paper tells a story fascinating in its own right, but whether they in fact add up to something more, with implications for private law harmonization as a whole, is the question I naturally want to take up in this commentary.
Hay: Federalsim And Supranational Organizations. Patterns For New Legal Structures., Thomas Buergenthal
Hay: Federalsim And Supranational Organizations. Patterns For New Legal Structures., Thomas Buergenthal
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Federalsim and Supranational Organizations. Patterns for New Legal Structures. By Peter Hay
Toward Supremacy Of Treaty-Constitution By Judicial Fiat: On The Margin Of The Case, Eric Stein
Toward Supremacy Of Treaty-Constitution By Judicial Fiat: On The Margin Of The Case, Eric Stein
Michigan Law Review
Increased interdependence of states in modem times has shaken the nineteenth century doctrines of extreme dualism and positivism. These doctrines would build an impenetrable wall between the international and national legal orders; they would elevate the state to the position of exclusive actor and deny the individual any standing in the international legal order; and, in the interpretation of a rule of law, they would exclude any regard for the political, economic, and social context in which the rule is applied.