Skip to content

Selfpos

  • Home
  • European Law
  • Canada Law
  • Internet Law
  • Property Law
  • New York Law
  • More
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
  • Toggle search form
The European Parliament and the development of European citizenship: From Fontainebleau to Maastricht (1984-1992) | Epthinktank

The European Parliament and the development of European citizenship: From Fontainebleau to Maastricht (1984-1992) | Epthinktank

Posted on November 1, 2024 By rehan.rafique No Comments on The European Parliament and the development of European citizenship: From Fontainebleau to Maastricht (1984-1992) | Epthinktank

More information about our Cookie Policy.

 

The present website is hosted by WordPress.com, a service by Automattic. Automattic is a global company with thousands of servers located in several separate data centres around the world. While Automattic takes care of the security of the platform, we, the European Parliamentary Research Service, own the content of the blog. For more detailed information about the compliance of Automattic products and services with the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), please see their dedicated page.

Data collected

We do not collect any personal data that could identify an individual user. The users that are registered in WordPress.com should consult wordpress.com terms of service. We do collect anonymised aggregate data for statistical purposes. The data collected for this purposes include: number of visits/visitors per page, the country of the user, and aggregate numbers of incoming and outgoing clicks.

We determine unique page counts by using a “hashed” version of the visitor’s IP address. The visitor’s full IP address is deleted from our logs after a little over a month. That timeframe is how long the data is needed in order to allow us to calculate your stats on a monthly basis and no longer.

We collect your email address only if you proactively requested to be notified about the updates on the blog. You can always contact us to remove your email address from our records or unsubscribe from the notification service.

We can also see your name and email address if you made a comment to one of our posts. We do not make the email address visible on the comment. Nevertheless, on request, we can delete your comments.

Cookies

We collect cookies only to facilitate your browsing experience, such as enabling you to share our posts via social media or comment on the post. The majority of cookies will be used only if you are a registered WordPress.com user. In this case, you are bound to WordPress.com terms of service.

Some pages embed content from third parties. In this case, you will need to actively consent to their terms in order to see the content.

We do not collect cookies to show advertisement nor resell any information collected with cookies to third parties. Read more about the wordpress.com cookie policy and the way to control cookies on their dedicated page.

European Law

Post navigation

Previous Post: ICANN says it WILL raise its domain taxes soon
Next Post: Key Changes in the 2025-2027 Levels Plan

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Was It Trivial or Consequential?
  • (De)coloniality and EU Legal Studies
  • Can I Sue After Quitting a Toxic Workplace in Ontario?
  • Summaries of judgments: Joined Cases T-830/22 and T-156/23 and Case T-1033/23 Poland v Commission 
  • Best of 2012: Fees, won’t you stay

Copyright © 2025 Selfpos.

Powered by PressBook Blog WordPress theme