National judicial autonomy: the example of national European law precedents in the Dutch case-law on the free movement of services and the freedom of establishment

Authors
Publication date 2009
Journal Review of European Administrative Law
Event 1st REALaw Research Forum
Volume | Issue number 2/2
Pages (from-to) 135-153
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Amsterdam Center for European Law and Governance (ACELG)
Abstract
This contribution elaborates on the existence of national judicial autonomy in European law. In the context of this paper, the main example used to demonstrate this phenomenon will be ‘national European law precedents’. National European law precedents are in fact a demonstration of a broader notion of national judicial autonomy. Questions that I particularly propose to address are the following: What is a ‘national European law precedent’? What sort of precedents can we think of in the context of Dutch European case-law? What consequences may follow from the existence of national European law
precedents? What is the significance of these precedents? Suppose, a need for correction
mechanisms exists, which practical solutions are the most obvious? In this paper I hope to shed some further light on these questions.
Document type Article
Note Proceedings title: European administrative law: top-down and bottom-up: proceedings of the first REALaw Research Forum Publisher: Europa Law Publishing Place of publication: Groningen ISBN: 9789089520722 Editors: K.J. de Graaf, J.H. Jans, A. Prechal, R.J.G.M. Widdershoven
Language English
Published at http://www.realaw.eu/1874_7973/vanharten_2009_2.pdf
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