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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Van Duyn v Home Office [1975] Ch 358 (C-41/78) was a case of the 1974 European Court of Justice concerning the free movement of workers between member states.The British government denied Yvonne Van Duyn, a Dutch national, an entry permit because she was affiliated with the Scientology religion, which the government [prior to parliamentary review in 1980] had believed to be socially harmful. She sued, citing the Treaty of Rome and Community law, and the case was referred to the European Court of Justice.Under article 48 of the Treaties of Rome, the…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Van Duyn v Home Office [1975] Ch 358 (C-41/78) was a case of the 1974 European Court of Justice concerning the free movement of workers between member states.The British government denied Yvonne Van Duyn, a Dutch national, an entry permit because she was affiliated with the Scientology religion, which the government [prior to parliamentary review in 1980] had believed to be socially harmful. She sued, citing the Treaty of Rome and Community law, and the case was referred to the European Court of Justice.Under article 48 of the Treaties of Rome, the Court ruled that states could exclude a national from another state on public policy grounds based only on the personal conduct of that individual, and in Van Duyn's case her affiliation with a group could be considered personal conduct. Thus, because Britain had [prior to parliamentary review in 1980] in the seventies a public policy of preventing the spread of Scientology, the Home secretary's exclusion order of Van Duyn was allowed under community law.