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Category: European Law

Just what the EUAA needed   – EU Law Enforcement

Posted on October 18, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Just what the EUAA needed   – EU Law Enforcement
Just what the EUAA needed   – EU Law Enforcement

By Elaine, Gersi, Joris and Leonoor The Asylum Crisis  Granted with a new mandate following the adoption of Regulation (EU) 2021/2303 on 19 January 2022, the European Union Agency for Asylum (EUAA) has transitioned into a full-fledged agency. Its goal is to improve the functioning of the Common European Asylum System (CEAS). As the successor…

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European Law

the CJEU first interprets the concept

Posted on October 17, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on the CJEU first interprets the concept
the CJEU first interprets the concept

  Professor Steve Peers, Royal Holloway University of London Photo credit: viewsridge, via Wikimedia commons   Introduction Along with judgments on Afghan women asylum seekers (discussed here) and the status of Turkey as a ‘safe third country’ (discussed here), the Court of Justice of the European Union recently gave its first judgment interpreting the substance…

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European Law

a mixed bag, inherited from 2016. – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy

Posted on October 17, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on a mixed bag, inherited from 2016. – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy
a mixed bag, inherited from 2016. – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy

Print this article POST 22 OF THE SERIES OF THE ODYSSEUS BLOG ON THE PACT ON MIGRATION & ASYLUM By Boldizsár Nagy, Professor Emeritus at the Department of International Relations, Central European University Long gestation, piecemeal changes It took almost eight years (2016-2024) to adopt the text of the Qualification regulation (Regulation (EU) 2024/1347 of…

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European Law

ESIL Newsletter – Autumn 2024 – European Society of International Law

Posted on October 16, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on ESIL Newsletter – Autumn 2024 – European Society of International Law
ESIL Newsletter – Autumn 2024 – European Society of International Law

Editors: Helmut Aust (Freie Universität Berlin) and Ana Salinas (Universidad de Málaga) 1. Message of the President Dear ESIL members, With our successful Vilnius conference now behind us, the academic year is in full swing and most of us are likely settling into a new teaching semester, welcoming new cohorts of students. Autumn is a…

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European Law

Representation of Afghanistan before the International Court of Justice – EJIL: Talk!

Posted on October 16, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Representation of Afghanistan before the International Court of Justice – EJIL: Talk!
Representation of Afghanistan before the International Court of Justice – EJIL: Talk!

Introduction

On 25 September 2024, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly High-level meeting, Canada, Australia, Germany and the Netherlands announced that they would take formal steps against Afghanistan for numerous violations by the Taliban of the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). The next day, 22 more States joined them in a statement supporting the initiative taken by these states ‘under Article 29 of CEDAW’. Article 29 of CEDAW requires State parties to any dispute not settled by negotiation to resort to arbitration. However, ‘[i]f within six months from the date of the request for arbitration the parties are unable to agree on the organization of the arbitration’, they may refer the dispute to the International Court of Justice (ICJ). This raises the question of whether the Taliban, not formally recognised by any State since it took power in Afghanistan at the end of a long-lasting civil war, can represent Afghanistan as its government before an arbitral tribunal or ultimately the ICJ. In this post, I specifically address this question, while Kyra Wigard covers the judicial aspects and overall implications of this initiative in her recent post.

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European Law

New Thematic Factsheet on Rights of Persons With Disabilities

Posted on October 15, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on New Thematic Factsheet on Rights of Persons With Disabilities
New Thematic Factsheet on Rights of Persons With Disabilities

The Council of Europe’s Department for the Execution of Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights has just issued a new thematic factsheet on how judgments of the Court have helped to protect and advance the rights of persons with disabilities in many countries. Here is a brief description: ‘The Council of Europe promotes,…

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European Law

Sharpening the Teeth of EU Social Fundamental Rights: A Comment on Bauer

Posted on October 15, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Sharpening the Teeth of EU Social Fundamental Rights: A Comment on Bauer
Sharpening the Teeth of EU Social Fundamental Rights: A Comment on Bauer

Tuesday was a big day in Luxembourg. The Court of Justice rendered what is probably the most important set of judgments on fundamental rights in a long time. Since the days of Akerberg Fransson, Digital Rights, Melloni, etc…, the Grand Chamber had not delivered such a principled decision on the thorny issue of fundamental rights,…

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European Law

Client Alert: First CBAM Quarterly Reporting Period

Posted on October 14, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Client Alert: First CBAM Quarterly Reporting Period
Client Alert: First CBAM Quarterly Reporting Period

Summary  On 1 October 2023, the European Union’s (EU) Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) entered into the transitional phase, with the first reporting period covering carbon-intense goods imported during the period 1 October 2023 to 31 December 2023, ending on 31 January 2024.  CBAM reporting declarants, businesses active in the cement, fertiliser, iron & steel,…

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European Law

Limiting ‘Security’ as a Justification in the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion – Verfassungsblog

Posted on October 13, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Limiting ‘Security’ as a Justification in the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion – Verfassungsblog
Limiting ‘Security’ as a Justification in the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion – Verfassungsblog

Security as both a legal and political concept allows the limitation and sometimes even derogation from legal rules; these departures are not absolute and have parameters. Yet, States often invoke security to justify disproportionate and outright illegal acts, which is aided by the fact that the precise contours of what is considered a legitimate security…

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European Law

the Puigdemont case and the dialogue between courts – Official Blog of UNIO

Posted on October 13, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on the Puigdemont case and the dialogue between courts – Official Blog of UNIO
the Puigdemont case and the dialogue between courts – Official Blog of UNIO

Teresa Freixes (President of Citizens pro Europe and Jean Monnet Professor ad personam) ▪            In recent weeks, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has handed down judgments that shatter the assertion, so dear to some, that law cannot constrain policy. I am referring, essentially, to those that have considered the EU’s agricultural…

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European Law

Posts pagination

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  • How a parliamentary “slip-up” could create Europe’s harshest migration law
  • Read the Published Version of My Paper Against Mandatory Online Age Authentication
  • Driving With a Suspended Licence in Ontario: Know the Risks
  • A first step towards the decriminalisation of the facilitation of unauthorised entry?  – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy
  • H.B. 40 expands the Texas Business Court’s jurisdiction and geography | United States | Global law firm

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