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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Alec Stone Sweet (Leitner Professor of Law, Politics, and International Studies, Yale Law School, and Official Fellow, Chair of Comparative Government, Nuffield College, Oxford.)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.456kg ISBN: 9780199275533ISBN 10: 019927553 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 09 September 2004 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Theory of European Legal Integration 2: Constructing a Supranational Constitution 3: The Common Market 4: Gender Equality 5: Environmental Protection 6: Judicialization as Global PhenomenonReviews<br> Stone Sweet, who teaches political science and law at Yale, has been a champion of the study of courts as shapers and interpreters of the constitutional order. In this important, impressive, and scholarly new book, he examines the contribution of the European Court of Justice to the construction of Europe. He shows how the ECJ has asserted its supremacy in national laws and courts and reinforced both the supra-and the subnational aspects of European integration--proving in the process that students of government need not only a solid grounding in history and a decent knowledge of economics, but also an understanding of the law.... It will be impossible to teach about the EU without resorting to this book. --Stanley Hoffmann, Foreign Affairs<br> Stone Sweet, who teaches political science and law at Yale, has been a champion of the study of courts as shapers and interpreters of the constitutional order. In this important, impressive, and scholarly new book, he examines the contribution of the European Court of Justice to the construction of Europe. He shows how the ECJ has asserted its supremacy in national laws and courts and reinforced both the supra-and the subnational aspects of European integratio? proving in the process that students of government need not only a solid grounding in history and a decent knowledge of economics, but also an understanding of the law... It will be impossible to teach about the EU without resorting to this book. Stone Sweet, who teaches political science and law at Yale, has been a champion of the study of courts as shapers and interpreters of the constitutional order. In this important, impressive, and scholarly new book, he examines the contribution of the European Court of Justice to the construction of Europe. He shows how the ECJ has asserted its supremacy in national laws and courts and reinforced both the supra-and the subnational aspects of European integration--proving in the process that students of government need not only a solid grounding in history and a decent knowledge of economics, but also an understanding of the law.... It will be impossible to teach about the EU without resorting to this book. --Stanley Hoffmann, Foreign Affairs<br> Stone Sweet, who teaches political science and law at Yale, has been a champion of the study of courts as shapers and interpreters of the constitutional order. In this important, impressive, and scholarly new book, he examines the contribution of the European Court of Justice to the construction of Europe. He shows how the ECJ has asserted its supremacy in national laws and courts and reinforced both the supra-and the subnational aspects of European integration--proving in the process that students of government need not only a solid grounding in history and a decent knowledge of economics, but also an understanding of the law.... It will be impossible to teach about the EU without resorting to this book. --Stanley Hoffmann, Foreign Affairs Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |