1. Introduction 2. Equality and Non-Discrimination Law 3. Non-Discrimination Law within the German and Dutch National Systems 4. The National Courts’ Recognition of the Gender Dimension within Cases on Sex and Sexual Orientation 5. The Dutch and German Approaches towards Direct Discrimination 6. The German and Dutch Approaches towards Indirect Discrimination 7. EU Non-Discrimination Law in the Courts
A multi-layered culturally informed comparison of juridical approaches to EU (in)direct sex and sexualities discrimination and its implementation in Germany and the Netherlands.
Jule Mulder is a lecturer in law at the University of Bristol.
This is a book that sets out to examine why and how it is that
national courts receive and apply EU non-discrimination law in very
different ways. Mulder offers a fascinating answer to this
question, showing how national legal, cultural, and political
factors shape the way national courts grapple with direct and
indirect discrimination on the grounds of sex and sexual
orientation. But in the course of this, Mulder also gives an
account of the inseparability of harmonization processes from
national legal, cultural, and political factors; a rich comparative
analysis of legal culture; and a normative theory of gender
equality and an assessment of the extent of its pursuit and
realization in practice. The book could be very valuably read for
any of these contributions alone.Take all these strands together,
and the result is a brilliantly insightful and inspiring read.
*Common Market Law Review*
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