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Category: European Law

The crisis facing the EU’s automotive industry | Epthinktank

Posted on October 4, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on The crisis facing the EU’s automotive industry | Epthinktank
The crisis facing the EU’s automotive industry | Epthinktank

Written by Guillaume Ragonnaud. The EU automotive sector has a century-old tradition of producing vehicles with internal combustion engines. It enjoys a global reputation for mechanical engineering excellence, quality, design and creativity. Today, the sector is at a crossroads: the green transition, digitalisation and global competition (in particular China’s emergence as a leading global auto…

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European Law

The Final Episode of a (Never-Ending) Series? CFSP Damages Claims and the ECHR Accession · European Law Blog

Posted on October 3, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on The Final Episode of a (Never-Ending) Series? CFSP Damages Claims and the ECHR Accession · European Law Blog
The Final Episode of a (Never-Ending) Series? CFSP Damages Claims and the ECHR Accession · European Law Blog

It seems to be a never-ending series with countless episodes: the puzzle of the EU’s accession to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) remains on the EU’s agenda. It continues to be there not least because of the constitutional imperative under Article 6 TEU, which was inserted in the Treaty of Lisbon in 2007….

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European Law

Armenia talks of European integration while its ties to Russia grow

Posted on October 3, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Armenia talks of European integration while its ties to Russia grow
Armenia talks of European integration while its ties to Russia grow

There has been speculation about the prospect of Armenia breaking with Russia and developing a closer relationship with the EU. Taras Kuzio argues that despite positive statements about European integration from Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Armenia remains closely tied to Russia. Over the last few years, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has repeatedly floated the…

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European Law

Edward Elgar Research Handbook on the Enforcement of EU Law – EU Law Enforcement

Posted on October 2, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Edward Elgar Research Handbook on the Enforcement of EU Law – EU Law Enforcement
Edward Elgar Research Handbook on the Enforcement of EU Law – EU Law Enforcement

The EU body of law counts more than 100,000 pieces of legislation and some argue that the legislative activity of the EU has been declining. However, are these laws being followed and do they bring the expected results? To answer these questions, it is important to investigate relevant implementation processes. Enforcement is a process of…

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European Law

How Elon Musk Destroyed Twitter, by Kate Conger and Ryan Mac

Posted on October 1, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on How Elon Musk Destroyed Twitter, by Kate Conger and Ryan Mac
How Elon Musk Destroyed Twitter, by Kate Conger and Ryan Mac

Professor Steve Peers, Royal Holloway University of London Photo credit: mikemacmarketing, image via vpnsrus   Full disclosure first: After exactly ten and a half years, I stopped posting on X (formerly Twitter) on August 10, 2024. I could not accept the owner’s view that those encouraging race riots in Britain online should not be punished, his…

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European Law

More welfare conditionality for asylum seekers – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy

Posted on September 30, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on More welfare conditionality for asylum seekers – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy
More welfare conditionality for asylum seekers – EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy

Print this article POST 14 OF THE SERIES OF THE ODYSSEUS BLOG ON THE PACT ON MIGRATION & ASYLUM By Lieneke Slingenberg, Professor of Migrants and the Rule of Law, at the Amsterdam Centre for Migration and Refugee Law of the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Almost eight years since the Commission issued the proposal, the recast…

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European Law

Challenging Gender Persecution in Afghanistan at the ICJ – EJIL: Talk!

Posted on September 30, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Challenging Gender Persecution in Afghanistan at the ICJ – EJIL: Talk!
Challenging Gender Persecution in Afghanistan at the ICJ – EJIL: Talk!

Introduction

In a groundbreaking move, Australia, Canada, Germany, and the Netherlands have announced their intention to take Afghanistan to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) over gender discrimination, following the Taliban’s brutal repression of women and girls. This would be the first time the ICJ has been used by a state to challenge another under the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women for gender discrimination. Since the Taliban seized control in August 2021, Afghan women and girls have faced what many activists, scholars, and policymakers are calling gender apartheid—a regime of systematic oppression that affects virtually every aspect of their lives.

The Taliban’s decrees have barred women from education beyond the sixth grade, mandated that they travel only with a mahram (male guardian), and imposed punishments for women who raise their voices in public. According to the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, these measures, coupled with increased surveillance by morality inspectors and restrictions on the media, represent “gender persecution, a crime against humanity,” that is reshaping Afghan society. The Taliban’s new vice and virtue laws, implemented in 2023, further entrench this system, with new rules that forbid women from leaving their homes unless fully covered and from engaging in public activities such as singing or raising their voices.

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European Law

Brexit and EU Citizenship After Wightman

Posted on September 29, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Brexit and EU Citizenship After Wightman
Brexit and EU Citizenship After Wightman

The Wightman case is a landmark decision of the Court of Justice that deserves careful attention. The speed at which developments are taking place in Brexitworld are probably clouding our eyes for the time being, but in the following months a more thorough analysis of the judgment will probably emerge and provide further insight into…

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European Law

Political Agreement on Money Laundering & Financing Terrorism

Posted on September 29, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Political Agreement on Money Laundering & Financing Terrorism
Political Agreement on Money Laundering & Financing Terrorism

On 17 January, the Council of the European Union (EU) and the European Parliament (EP) reached a provisional agreement on a new legislative package that aims to strengthen EU rules on money laundering (AML) and terrorist financing activities (CFT). The Commission presented its AML/CFT legislative package on 20 July 2021, aiming to establish a new…

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European Law

“Not only legally dubious but also ineffective” – Verfassungsblog

Posted on September 28, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on “Not only legally dubious but also ineffective” – Verfassungsblog
“Not only legally dubious but also ineffective” – Verfassungsblog

Five Questions to Lilian Tsourdi Germany is once again controlling all of its national borders, triggering fears that this could put the European project at risk. In Germany, the measures are being discussed as a necessary response to the knife attack in Solingen, where three people were killed by an asylum seeker. At the same…

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European Law

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  • Convention on the Establishment of the International Organization for Mediation Signed in Hong Kong, China – EJIL: Talk!
  • New Standards (or is it a Book Ban?) in Alberta K-12 Schools
  • Can a Judiciary Law 487 Claim Lie For Acts in Federal Court?
  • Ukraine and the Netherlands v. Russia – A Tour de Force in Applying the Convention as Part of International Law
  • What a Three-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit Really Means

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