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The Oxford Handbook of European Union Law
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Table of Contents

Part I: Conceptualizing EU Law
1: Neil Walker: The Philosophy of European Union Law
2: Jan Komarek: Legal Reasoning in EU Law
3: Jan Klabbers: Straddling the Fence: The EU and International Law
Part II: The Architecture of EU Law
4: Robert Schutze: EU Competences: Existence and Exercise
5: Deirdre Curtin and Tatevik Manucharyan: Legal Acts and Hierarchy of Norms in EU Law
6: Christoph Hillion: Accession and Withdrawal in the Law of the European Union
7: Michal Bobek: The Court of Justice of the European Union
8: Monica Claes: Primacy and the National Reception
9: Dorota Leczykiewicz: Direct Effect, Effective Judicial Protection, and State Liability
10: Andrew Williams: Human Rights in the EU
11: Panos Koutrakos: Common External Policies: Common Commercial Policy, Common Foreign and Security Policy, Common Security and Defence Policy
Part III: Making and Administering EU Law
12: Damian Chalmers: The Democratic Ambiguity of EU Law-Making and its Enemies
13: Alexander Turk: Comitology
14: Melanie Smith: The Evolution of Infringement and Sanction Procedures: Of Pilots, Diversions, Collisions, and Circling
15: Anthony Arnull: Judicial Review in the European Union
16: Takis Tridimas: Dialogue with National Courts
17: Paul Craig: Accountability and Representation in EU Law
Part IV: The Economic Constitution and the Citizen
18: Eleanor Spaventa: The Free Movement of Workers in the 21st Century
19: Niamh Nic Shuibhne: The Developing Legal Dimensions of Union Citizenship
20: Kenneth Armstrong: Goods
21: Zoe Adams and Simon Deakin: Establishment
22: Gareth Davies: The Law on the Free Movement of Services: Powerful, but not always Persuasive
Part V: Regulation of the Market Place
23: Loïc Azoulai: The Complex Weave of Harmonization
24: Okeoghene Odudu: Competition and Merger Law and Policy
25: Alison Jones: Competition Law Enforcement
26: Andrea Biondi and Elisabetta Righini: An Evolutionary Theory of State Aid Control
27: Catherine Seville: EU Intellectual Property: Exercises in Harmonization
Part VI: Economic, Fiscal, and Monetary Union
28: Fabian Amtenbrink: The Metamorphosis of European Economic and Monetary Union
29: Niamh Moloney: Financial Markets Regulation
30: Thomas Horsley: Death, Taxes, and (Targeted) Judicial Dynamism: The Free Movement of Capital in EU Law
31: Paul Farmer: Direct Taxation and the Fundamental Freedoms
Part VII: The Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice
32: Christopher Harding: EU Criminal Law under the Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice
33: Nadine El-Enany: EU Migration and Asylum Law under the Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice
34: Richard Fentiman: The Harmonization of Civil Jurisdiction
Part VIII: Beyond the Regulatory State?
35: Elise Muir: Pursuing Equality in the EU
36: Phil Syrpis: The EU and National Systems of Labour Law
37: Mark Dawson and Bruno De Witte: Welfare Policy and Social Inclusion
38: Maria Lee: Experts and Publics in EU Environmental Law

About the Author

After studying at the School of European Studies, University of Sussex, and the Institut d'Etudes Européennes, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Anthony Arnull qualified as a solicitor with a 'magic circle' firm in the City of London. He was awarded his doctorate by the University of Leicester in 1988. From 1989 to 1992 he worked at the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg as a référendaire in the chambers of Advocate General FG Jacobs.
Appointed Professor of European Law at the University of Birmingham in 1991, he became Barber Professor of Jurisprudence in 2008 and served as Head of Birmingham Law School between 2006 and 2009. He is Consultant Editor of the
European Law Review, having been its co-editor from 1996 to 2007. He sits on the Advisory Board of the Common Market Law Reports and the comité scientifique of the Journal de Droit Européen. He has given evidence to a number of UK Parliamentary Select Committees and as Specialist Adviser to the House of Lords EU Committee. After working at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law, Damian Chalmers began his university career at the University of Liverpool. He
moved to the London School of Economics and Political Science after taking his bar exams and became a professor in 2006. He was Head of its European Institute between 2007 and 2011 as well as Head of its Jean Monnet
Centre of Excellence. He was co-editor of the European Law Review between 2003 and 2009.

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