Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (105)
- Part of a Book (62)
- Review (21)
- Book (20)
- Conference Proceeding (14)
- Contribution to a Periodical (12)
- Public lecture (11)
- Part of a commentary (10)
- Report (4)
- Interview (2)
Language
- German (188)
- English (75)
- Other Language (2)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (265)
Keywords
- Europäische Union (6)
- Verwaltungsrecht (3)
- EU (2)
- Europäischen Union (2)
- Zollunion (2)
- delegated acts (2)
- differentiation (2)
- implementing acts (2)
- ACCC (1)
- Aarhus convention (1)
Institute
- Lehrstuhl für Öffentliches Recht, insbesondere Europarecht und Völkerrecht (Univ.-Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Weiß) (265) (remove)
Durch die Konferenz zur Zukunft Europas hat die Debatte um eine Reform des EU-Primär-rechts neue Fahrt aufgenommen. Eine Vertragsreform tut not, im Interesse effektiverer, aber auch demokratischerer Beschlussfassung, erweiterter Kompetenzen und konsentierter Ver-bundgrundlagen zur Bewältigung der zahlreichen äußeren und inneren Herausforderungen.
The book explores the impact of WTO law on domestic regulatory autonomy. It identifies and critically analyses the mechanisms working in WTO law that cause increasing interferences with domestic law and thus restrain the regulatory autonomy of the WTO members. The book proposes ways how WTO law be conceptualized to enhance the policy space of WTO members. Therefore, the book demonstrates the flexibilities in interpreting and applying WTO core principles and provisions and explores interpretive and institutional conceptions that could serve as a pathway of allocating greater policy leeway to WTO members.
The analyses presented address the disturbing observation that even though WTO law appreciates the regulatory leeway of WTO members in several provisions across agreements, the WTO judiciary´s case law, but also other governance mechanism active in the WTO appear to narrow down the WTO members´ regulatory autonomy and to considerably limit the space for domestic policy choices. Wide spread, even scholarly perception of the WTO, and most recently the Trump administration blame the WTO, in particular its dispute settlement branch, for being biased towards free trade and unduly restraining even legitimate domestic policies, and voiding the domestic policy space needed for addressing societal concerns and global problems. A closer look at the development of GATT/WTO law, however, reveals that, in GATT era, panels were aware of the effect their interpretations had on domestic policy space, and that some of the more recent WTO dispute settlement reports show attempts to expand WTO member´s leeway again. These observations are the starting point for an indepth analysis of the different mechanisms present in WTO law which impact on domestic regulation.
Welthandelsrecht
(2007)
Welthandelsrecht
(2003)
Welthandelsrecht
(2022)
Seit ihrer Gründung steht die Welthandelsorganisation (WTO) samt den von ihr verwalteten Übereinkommen über den Handel mit Waren (GATT), Dienstleistungen (GATS) sowie dem Schutz geistigen Eigentums (TRIPS) im Mittelpunkt der Diskussionen über Globalisierung, global governance, Umweltschutz und internationale Verteilungsgerechtigkeit.
Aus dem Inhalt: WTO in schwierigen Zeiten; Grundprinzipien des Multilateralismus; Streitbeilegungsverfahren; Regelungen über den Warenhandel und technische Handels-hemmnisse; Regionale Integration; Handelspolitische Schutzinstrumente; Internationales Währungssystem; Investitionen und Investitionsschutz; Handel mit Dienstleistungen und Schutz geistigen Eigentums; Entwicklungsländer; E-Commerce und Digital Trade; Menschen-rechte, Umwelt- und Sozialstandards; Zukunft der WTO.
Zur Neuauflage: Für die Neuauflage wurde das Werk grundlegend aktualisiert und im Hin-blick auf die krisenhaften neuen Herausforderungen für die WTO und den Multilateralismus (Anstieg des Unilateralismus, Handelskriege, Aufstieg Chinas, zunehmend geostrategische Ausrichtung der Handelspolitik, Lähmung des Appellate Body), die neuen Themen im Welt-handel (Digital Trade, E-Commerce, Gesundheitsschutz) und die einschlägige Recht-sprechungsentwicklung überarbeitet.
Vortrag zum Dublin System
(2016)
Uniós szakpolitikák
(2019)
Umsetzung und Durchsetzung der EU-Handelspolitik: Neue Entwicklungen der „Open Strategic Autonomy“
(2020)
Die Europäische Kommission legt seit einiger Zeit eine stärkere Betonung auf die Verbesserung der Um- und Durchsetzung der Handelsregeln. Aktuell zeichnet sich dies in einer Fülle von Vorhaben und Initiativen ab, die sich auch in die projektierte Erneuerung der Handelspolitik unter dem Leitbild der „offenen strategischen Autonomie“ einfügen. Der Beitrag untersucht die neuen Entwicklungen auf institutioneller, prätorischer und legislativer Ebene.
Mixed agreements have been a preferred form of entering into international treaties chosen by the EU and its Member States, despite the complexities their usage implies. Recent attempts of the EU institutions to prefer the conclusion of EU only agreements to mixed agreements, as a consequence of the broad interpretation of EU exclusive trade competences by the CJEU in Opinion 2/15 are motivated by the hope for increased efficiency in EU treaty making. They, however, provoke criticism with regard to democratic legitimacy and the EU principle of conferral, which constrain the EU to adopt only those legal acts for which it is competent. As this criticism is particularly strong in Germany and led to constitutional challenges of EU only acts, the present contribution will explain the treatment of mixed agreements in the constitutional order of Germany and explore the constitutional challenges that EU only agreements pose to the German constitutional order. This discussion will thus show the German legal order’s continued preference for mixed agreements, in view of the jurisprudence of the German Federal Constitutional Court (FCC). Those constitutional challenges are particularly topical in view of the most recent case law of the CJEU that stressed the political leeway of the EU Council to choose, when it comes to the negotiation and conclusion of EU agreements based on shard competences, between either an EU only agreement or a mixed agreement. This political leeway turns mixity into a facultative endeavour in the hands of the Council. Under the constitutional perceptions of the FCC, such type of facultative mixity meets with considerable constitutional concerns because it replaces what was formerly held obligatory mixity.