Hart Publishing is publishing a
new book on the history of the Cassis de Dijon-case.
ABOUT THE BOOK
Why is the 1979 the Court of
Justice judgment in Cassis de Dijon so famous and so
significant in the evolution of EU trade law?. As this landmark judgment
approaches middle age, this book revisits this decision with the benefit of
hindsight: why did the Court of Justice decide Cassis de Dijon as it did? How
has the decision been developed by the EU? And, looking forward, how has the
decision been used to develop international trade? This book brings together
some of the leading writers in the field of EU trade law, constitutional law
and European history for a fresh examination of his ground-breaking judgment,
looking at it from the perspective of its past (who, what and why); its present
(is it making a difference?); and its future (how does it fit in international
trade agreements, including the future UK-EU FTA?).
ABOUT THE EDITORS
Albertina Albors-Llorens is
University Senior Lecturer, Fellow of St John's College and Member of the
Centre for European Legal Studies at the Faculty of Law, University of
Cambridge.
Catherine Barnard is Professor of
EU Law and Employment Law and Fellow of Trinity College, University of
Cambridge.
Brigitte Leucht is Senior
Lecturer in German and European Studies at the University of Portsmouth, UK.
She is the editor, along with Wolfram Keiser and Morten Rasmussen, of The
History of the European Union: Origins of a Trans- and Supranational Polity 1950-72
(2008) and, with Wolfram Keiser and Michael Gehler, Transnational Networks in
Regional Integration (2010).
More info here
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