The Italian Influence on European Law: Judges and Advocates General (1952-2000)

Author:   Daniele Gallo (LUISS University, Italy) ,  Roberto Mastroianni (University of Naples ’Federico II‘, Italy) ,  Fernanda G. Nicola (Washington College of Law, USA) ,  Lorenzo Cecchetti (Luiss University, Italy)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781509967766


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   31 October 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Italian Influence on European Law: Judges and Advocates General (1952-2000)


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Author:   Daniele Gallo (LUISS University, Italy) ,  Roberto Mastroianni (University of Naples ’Federico II‘, Italy) ,  Fernanda G. Nicola (Washington College of Law, USA) ,  Lorenzo Cecchetti (Luiss University, Italy)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Hart Publishing
ISBN:  

9781509967766


ISBN 10:   1509967761
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   31 October 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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This book showcases the importance of studying the history of European Union law. By recovering, through careful biographical studies, the leading Italian figures involved in the development of European Union law, the book offers a new, groundbreaking understanding of how Italy helped to shape the European legal order and how it was in turn affected by it. * Morten Rasmussen, Associate Professor in history, University of Copenhagen * What does it mean to be at once Italian, male, and a member of the EU judiciary in the second half of the 20th century? Does the shared nationality of a subset of CJEU Judges and AGs imply any one thing in particular? Is there a distinctly Italian style, to quote John Henry Merryman, or some other thread that connects, epistemically, the biographies collected in this Volume? Much to their credit, the Editors refrain from feeding the reader a facile answer to such questions. An enjoyable read and an important contribution to legal sociology, history, and theory of adjudication. * Daniela Caruso, Professor of Law emerita, Boston University School of Law * Against the backdrop of the rich legal tapestry which EU law has become, this book provides a fascinating insight into the contribution of Italy’s judicial pioneers during the first phases of the legal integration process. * Professor Síofra O’Leary, Former President, European Court of Human Rights * The Italian Influence on European Law is a splendid book that casts both light and scrutiny on the lives of the Italian judges at the European Court of Justice. Readers only familiar with the Court as an impersonal institution will read fascinating accounts of Pilotti, Mancini, Tesauro – and, above all, of Alberto Trabucchi, who contributed so much to the birth of the direct effect doctrine in the early 1960s. More profoundly, the book asks us to reflect on the ways that distinctively national approaches to law have had a profound effect on European law. The Italian Influence on European Law therefore sets new agendas by challenging researchers to take seriously both the individual and the national in that most anonymous and transnational of projects, the European legal order. * William Phelan, author of Great Judgments of the European Court of Justice *


This book showcases the importance of studying the history of European Union law. By recovering, through careful biographical studies, the leading Italian figures involved in the development of European Union law, the book offers a new, groundbreaking understanding of how Italy helped to shape the European legal order and how it was in turn affected by it. * Morten Rasmussen, Associate Professor in history, University of Copenhagen * What does it mean to be at once Italian, male, and a member of the EU judiciary in the second half of the 20th century? Does the shared nationality of a subset of CJEU Judges and AGs imply any one thing in particular? Is there a distinctly Italian style, to quote John Henry Merryman, or some other thread that connects, epistemically, the biographies collected in this Volume? Much to their credit, the Editors refrain from feeding the reader a facile answer to such questions. An enjoyable read and an important contribution to legal sociology, history, and theory of adjudication. * Daniela Caruso, Professor of Law emerita, Boston University School of Law *


Author Information

Daniele Gallo is Full Professor of EU Law at Luiss University Law Department, Rome, Italy, where he was Jean Monnet Chair 2020-2023. Roberto Mastroianni is Full Professor of EU Law at the Law School of the University of Naples ’Federico II‘, Italy, and Judge at the General Court of the EU. Fernanda G Nicola is Professor of Law at American University, Washington College of Law, USA. Lorenzo Cecchetti is Postdoctoral Research Fellow in EU Law at Luiss University Law Department, Rome, Italy.

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