Lawyering Europe : European law as a transnational social field
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Lawyering Europe : European law as a transnational social field
(Modern studies in European law, v. 37)
Hart, 2013
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
While scholarly writing has dealt with the role of law in the process of European integration, so far it has shed little light on the lawyers and communities of lawyers involved in that process. Law has been one of the most thoroughly investigated aspects of the European integration process, and EU law has become a well-established academic discipline, with the emergence more recently of an impressive body of legal and political science literature on 'European law in context'. Yet this field has been dominated by an essentially judicial narrative, focused on the role of the European courts, underestimating in the process the multifaceted roles lawyers and law play in the EU polity, notably the roles they play beyond the litigation arena. This volume seeks to promote a deeper understanding of European law as a social and political phenomenon, presenting a more complete view of the European legal field by looking beyond the courts, and at the same time broadening the scholarly horizon by exploring the ways in which European law is actually made. To do this it describes the roles of the great variety of actors who stand behind legal norms and decisions, bringing together perspectives from various disciplines (law, political science, political sociology and history), to offer a global multi-disciplinary reassessment of the role of 'law' and 'lawyers' in the European integration process.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Euro-lawyering, Transnational Social Fields and European Polity-Building
Antoine Vauchez
Part I: Repeat Players
1. 'Ten Majestic Figures in Long Amaranth Robes': The Formation of theCourt of Justice of the European Communities
Antonin Cohen
2. The Role of Legal Services in the Elaboration of European Legislation
Jean Paul Jacque
3. From the Margins on the European Legal Field: The Governments' Agentsand their Influence on the Development of European Union Law
Marie-Pierre Granger
Part II: Centres and Peripheries
4. Courts United? On European Judicial Networks
Maartje de Visser and Monica Claes
5. European Union Law: A Unified Academic Discipline?
Bruno de Witte
6. The ECHR and the Birth of (European) Human Rights Law as anAcademic Discipline
Stephanie Hennette-Vauchez
Part III: European Elites and their Legal Credentials
7. Where Have all the Lawyers Gone? Structures and Transformations ofTop European Commission Officials' Legal Training
Didier Georgakakis and Marine de Lassalle
8. The Creation of Institutional Expertise at the European Parliament: Legal and Political Resources of the Members of the Constitutional Affairs Committee
Laurent Godmer and Guillaume Marrel
9. Law and Lawyers in the Brussels World of Commercial Consultants
Christian Lahusen
Part IV: The Disputed Role of Law in the Government of Europe
10. The Power of Legal Knowledge in the Reform of Fundamental Law: The Case of the European Charter of Fundamental Rights
Mikael Rask Madsen
11. Soft Law and the Rule of Law in the European Union: Revision or Redundancy?
Mark Dawson
12. Eurolegalism and the European Legal Field
R Daniel Kelemen
13. Opportunities and Limits of a Weak Field: Lawyers and the Genesis of a Field of European Economic Power
Yves Dezalay
by "Nielsen BookData"