How 'free' is the free movement of persons? This collection of essays reconsiders the fundamentals of EU free movement law. Through different examples - posted workers, social security, Brexit, and Union citizenship - each chapter revisits the categories, and the resulting boundaries, that have become entrenched in these laws.
How 'free' is the free movement of persons? This collection of essays reconsiders the fundamentals of EU free movement law. Through different examples - posted workers, social security, Brexit, and Union citizenship - each chapter revisits the categories, and the resulting boundaries, that have become entrenched in these laws.
Niamh Nic Shuibhne is Professor of EU Law at the University of Edinburgh. Her research examines substantive EU law from a constitutional perspective, with particular focus on principle-based analysis of free movement and Union citizenship. She was awarded a Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship (2016-2019) to examine how protection of the commitment to equal treatment in EU law came to represent an ideological challenge for the Union: how it became a 'confounding' rather than founding EU value. Her current research explores the integrity of the EU legal order as well as the concepts and principles that both constitute and distinguish it. Niamh is a Joint Editor of the Common Market Law Review.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1: Niamh Nic Shuibhne: Introduction: Revisiting EU Law on the Free Movement of Persons * 2: Ségolène Barbou des Places: Is Free Movement (Law) Fully Emancipated from Migration (Law)? * 3: Sacha Garben: Posted Workers are Persons Too! - Posting and the Constitutional Democratic Question of Fair Mobility in the European Union * 4: Niamh Nic Shuibhne: Economic Activity and EU Citizenship Law: Seeding Means-based Logic in a Status-based Freedom * 5: Martin Ruhs and Joakim Palme: Free Movement and European Welfare States: Why Child Benefits for EU Workers Should Not Be Exportable * 6: Eleanor Spaventa: Brexit and the Free Movement of Persons: What is EU Citizenship Really About?
* 1: Niamh Nic Shuibhne: Introduction: Revisiting EU Law on the Free Movement of Persons * 2: Ségolène Barbou des Places: Is Free Movement (Law) Fully Emancipated from Migration (Law)? * 3: Sacha Garben: Posted Workers are Persons Too! - Posting and the Constitutional Democratic Question of Fair Mobility in the European Union * 4: Niamh Nic Shuibhne: Economic Activity and EU Citizenship Law: Seeding Means-based Logic in a Status-based Freedom * 5: Martin Ruhs and Joakim Palme: Free Movement and European Welfare States: Why Child Benefits for EU Workers Should Not Be Exportable * 6: Eleanor Spaventa: Brexit and the Free Movement of Persons: What is EU Citizenship Really About?
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