Description |
1 online resource (537 pages) |
Series |
Routledge Research in EU Law |
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Routledge research in EU law.
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Contents |
Cover; Half Title; Series Information; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Notes on contributors; Foreword; 1 Introduction; Conclusion; Part I The EU as an Area of Freedom, Security and Justice; 2 The rise and fall of EU justice and home affairs law; 1 Introduction; 2 Institutional evolution1; 2.1 Prior to 1993; 2.2 1993-1999; 2.3 1999-2005; 2.4 2005-2009; 2.5 Treaty of Lisbon; 3 Policy evolution; 3.1 Visas and border controls; 3.1.1 Prior to 1993; 3.1.2 1993-1999; 3.1.3 1999-2009; 3.1.4 After 2009; 3.2 Asylum; 3.2.1 Prior to 1999; 3.2.2 1999-2009; 3.2.3 After 2009 |
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3.3 Irregular migration3.3.1 Prior to 1999; 3.3.2 1999-2009; 3.3.3 After 2009; 3.4 Legal migration; 3.4.1 Prior to 1999; 3.4.2 1999-2009; 3.4.3 After 2009; 3.5 Criminal law; 3.5.1 Prior to 1999; 3.5.2 1999-2009; 3.5.3 After 2009; 4 Conclusions; 3 Sketches of a theory of Europe as an Area of Freedom, Security and Justice; Introduction; 1 The partially autonomous meaning of freedom, security and justice; 2 The AFSJ as a space; 3 Security as a technique of governance; Conclusions; Bibliography; Case law; Official documents; 4 Human rights and the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice |
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1 Asylum and immigration1.1 A human right to asylum; 1.2 Human rights issues arising in the asylum examination procedure; 1.3 Reception conditions, human rights and the responsibility of a Member State to examine an asylum application; 1.4 The right to family life of regular migrants and refugees; 1.5 Removal of illegal migrants and penalties for illegal migration; 1.6 The right to be heard and the right to an effective remedy in asylum and return proceedings; 2 Combating crime; 2.1 The European Arrest Warrant; 2.2 Access to a lawyer; 2.3 Mutual recognition of judgments |
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2.4 Protection of victims of crimes2.5 Protection of personal data; 2.6 Ne bis in idem; 3 Judicial cooperation in civil matters; 3.1 Length of proceedings; 3.2 Mutual recognition of judgments; 3.3 Marriage and parental responsibility; 4 Conclusion; Part II EU criminal law; 5 The mutual recognition principle and EU criminal law; 1 Introduction; 2 Main changes in comparison with the previous cooperation models; 2.1 The philosophy of the principle: mutual trust and reliance on the control performed in the issuing State; 2.2 Other changes |
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3 The different faces of mutual recognition through two case studies: from the EAW to the EIO3.1 The EAW or the success story of the EU for criminal justice; 3.1.1 The EAW -- origins and features; 3.1.2 The critiques and downsides of the EAW; 3.2 The EIO -- a new understanding of the principle of mutual recognition?; 3.2.1 Introduction; 3.2.2 Differences with the EAW; 3.2.3 Revising the philosophy of mutual recognition: alternative investigative measures and ... ; 4 Conclusion: main challenges and prospects |
Notes |
6 The European Arrest Warrant, constitutional rights and the changing legal thinking: Values once recognised .. |
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Print version record |
Subject |
Criminal justice, Administration of -- European Union countries
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Justice, Administration of -- European Union countries
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Freedom of movement -- European Union countries
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Criminal justice, Administration of
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Freedom of movement
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Justice, Administration of
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European Union countries
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Herlin-Karnell, Ester
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Matera, Claudio
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ISBN |
9781317573234 |
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1317573234 |
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