Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- European Community (5)
- Treaties (3)
- European Union (2)
- Authority (1)
- Commercial policy (1)
-
- Common Market (1)
- Compatability (1)
- Competence (1)
- Competition (1)
- Customs (1)
- Europe (1)
- European Court of Justice (1)
- European integration (1)
- External powers (1)
- Goods (1)
- Harmonization (1)
- Joint ventures (1)
- Judical review (1)
- Judicial interpretation (1)
- Legal reasoning (1)
- Legal systems (1)
- Maastricht Treaty (1)
- Regulation (1)
- Summaries (1)
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Beyond The Reasons Stated In Judgments, Giorgio Gaja
Beyond The Reasons Stated In Judgments, Giorgio Gaja
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Legal Reasoning of the European Court of Justice: Towards a European Jurisprudence by Joxerramon Bengoetxea
Are We Compatible?: Current European Community Law On The Compatibility Of Joint Ventures With The Common Market And Possibilities For Future Development, Alyssa A. Grikscheit
Are We Compatible?: Current European Community Law On The Compatibility Of Joint Ventures With The Common Market And Possibilities For Future Development, Alyssa A. Grikscheit
Michigan Law Review
The Commission and commentators note that the potential for reform in the procedural arena is quite great. The current literature discusses the difficulties would-be venturers have in determining if their proposed venture is concentrative or cooperative and the procedural differences between notifications under the two standards.
This Note argues, however, that the substantive differences between the two standards are even more problematic than the procedural ones. Reducing the substantive differences between the two compatibility standards, short of creating a single standard that is unresponsive to the tensions between concentrative and cooperative situations, will have a beneficial impact. Similar standards of …
Intellectual Property And The External Power Of The European Community: The New Extension, A. David Demiray
Intellectual Property And The External Power Of The European Community: The New Extension, A. David Demiray
Michigan Journal of International Law
"[T]heory is somewhat lagging behind the facts and developing only in reaction to these facts," argues C.W.A. Timmermans regarding the European Community's (the EC or the Community) legal basis for extending its external power. The Community tends to extend its external competence before having a clear authority for doing so and only later provides a post hoc rationale. This observation suggests that the justification, not the propriety, of a newly acquired external competence is the question. Nowhere is this modus operandi better illustrated, or more sorely tested, than by the Community's growing involvement with and pursuit of international intellectual property …
A Practitioner's Guide To The Maastricht Treaty, Michael H. Abbey, Nicholas Bromfield
A Practitioner's Guide To The Maastricht Treaty, Michael H. Abbey, Nicholas Bromfield
Michigan Journal of International Law
Before undertaking a section by section summary of the Maastricht Treaty, this article will briefly discuss some of the highlights of the Treaty and the prospects for European Monetary Union.
Promises To Keep And Miles To Go: A Look At Europe Poised Between Two Treaties, Willajeanne F. Mclean
Promises To Keep And Miles To Go: A Look At Europe Poised Between Two Treaties, Willajeanne F. Mclean
Michigan Journal of International Law
Review of Singular Europe: Economy and Polity of the European Community After 1992 (William J. Adams ed.) and Decision-Making in the European Community: The Council Presidency and European Integration by Emil J. Kirchner
Ec Customs Classification Rules: Should Ice Cream Melt?, Edwin A. Vermulst
Ec Customs Classification Rules: Should Ice Cream Melt?, Edwin A. Vermulst
Michigan Journal of International Law
This Article will demonstrate that these classification conflicts seldom have definitive solutions by examining European Community (EC or Community) classification rules in light of the international framework. This approach is justified because the EC's customs classification system, centered on the Combined Nomenclature (CN), is based on the most commonly used international system of classification, the Harmonized System (HS).