Publicaties
Gekozen filters:
Gekozen filters:
The European Court of Justice as the Guardian of the Rule of EU Social Law KU Leuven
© Frank Vandenbroucke, Catherine Barnard, and Geert De Baere 2017. Introduction Originally, the Treaties provided virtually no legal basis for the adoption of EU measures in the field of social law. With the exceptions of the principle of non-discrimination on grounds of nationality, the principle of equal pay for men and women and the principle of equivalence between paid holiday schemes, policy choices relating to social justice were to remain ...
Allocation of the burden of proof under the anti-abuse rule of the parent-subsidiary directive according to the most recent ECJ case law Universiteit Antwerpen
The author examines the judgment rendered by the Court in the Deister Holding and Juhler Holding cases and its implications, with special regard to the allocation of the burden of proof between the tax authorities and the taxpayer. The author aims to investigate whether and to what extent Member States - in light of the most recent ECJ case law are entitled to enact domestic anti-abuse rules which presume that abuse occurred under the ...
Constitutional and Rule of Law culture in the Netherlands: a sober affair Universiteit Antwerpen
The Emergence of the Rule of Law in Western Constitutional History: Revising Traditional Narratives KU Leuven
© Cambridge University Press 2017. In June 1990, the representatives of the 35 States participating in the Conference on Cooperation and Security in Europe gathered in Copenhagen for what would turn out to become one of the most important stepping stones in the articulation of a new political and legal order for Europe at the end of the Cold War. At the conference, the US delegation, seconded by Canada and the UK, tabled a draft declaration on ...
The Contribution of International and Supranational Courts to the Rule of Law KU Leuven
© The Editors and Contributors Severally 2015. All rights reserved. International and supranational courts are increasingly central to the development of a transnational rule of law. Except for insiders, the functioning and impact of these courts remain largely unknown. Addressing this gap, this innovative book examines the manner in which and the extent to which international courts and tribunals contribute to the rule of law at the national, ...