Dictionary of Statuses within EU Law : The Individual Statuses as Pillar of European Union Integration / edited by Antonio Bartolini, Roberto Cippitani, Valentina Colcelli.
2019
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Title
Dictionary of Statuses within EU Law : The Individual Statuses as Pillar of European Union Integration / edited by Antonio Bartolini, Roberto Cippitani, Valentina Colcelli.
Added Corporate Author
Edition
1st ed. 2019.
Imprint
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2019.
Description
XVII, 652 p. online resource
Formatted Contents Note
Introduction
Part I Historical and Juridical Contexts for the Status Within European Union Law
Historical Overview of the Status Topic
From Cosmopolitan Individual Status (French Civil Code of 1804) and "l'exercice des droits civils" to EU Citizenship
Part II Dictionary of European Union Statuses
Administrative Judges in Europe
Artist
Asylum Seeker
Author
Banker
Biological Mother
Child and Adolescent
Climate Change Activist
Cohabiting (Status of)
Consumer
Creditor and Debtor
Data Manager
Data Protection Officer
Data Subject
Diplomatic Agent
Disabled
Disabled Person
Economic Operator
Economic Operator of Third Countries
Elderly People
Entrepreneur
Ethics Advisor on Research Projects
EU Citizen
EU Investor
EU Judge
EU Officer
EU Representative to a Third Country
Expert in Renewable Energies
Expropriated Party
Family Member
Farmer
Former EU Citizen
Gender Victim of Gender-Based Violence
Human Embryo
Human Resource in Science and Technology
Immigrant and Emigrant
Individual Genetic Status
Internet Entrepreneur
Inventor
Jean Monnet Chairholder
Journalist
Landowner
Lawyer
LGBTIQ People
Member of the European Parliament
Musician
Party to Contracts
Passenger
Patient
Policemen
Pollution Victim
Project Manager
Provider and User of Genetic Resources
Public Body
Public Officer
Recipient of EU Programmes
Refugee
Religious Believer
Religious Person
Research Volunteer
Researcher
Sex Worker
Soldier
Sportsperson
Statutory Auditor
Student
Subsidiary Status
Taxpayer
Teacher
Technology Transfer Professional
Third Country National
Transgender Person
Transsexual Person
User
Voluntary
Vulnerable Person
Waste Producer and Waste Holder
Woman
Worker.
Part I Historical and Juridical Contexts for the Status Within European Union Law
Historical Overview of the Status Topic
From Cosmopolitan Individual Status (French Civil Code of 1804) and "l'exercice des droits civils" to EU Citizenship
Part II Dictionary of European Union Statuses
Administrative Judges in Europe
Artist
Asylum Seeker
Author
Banker
Biological Mother
Child and Adolescent
Climate Change Activist
Cohabiting (Status of)
Consumer
Creditor and Debtor
Data Manager
Data Protection Officer
Data Subject
Diplomatic Agent
Disabled
Disabled Person
Economic Operator
Economic Operator of Third Countries
Elderly People
Entrepreneur
Ethics Advisor on Research Projects
EU Citizen
EU Investor
EU Judge
EU Officer
EU Representative to a Third Country
Expert in Renewable Energies
Expropriated Party
Family Member
Farmer
Former EU Citizen
Gender Victim of Gender-Based Violence
Human Embryo
Human Resource in Science and Technology
Immigrant and Emigrant
Individual Genetic Status
Internet Entrepreneur
Inventor
Jean Monnet Chairholder
Journalist
Landowner
Lawyer
LGBTIQ People
Member of the European Parliament
Musician
Party to Contracts
Passenger
Patient
Policemen
Pollution Victim
Project Manager
Provider and User of Genetic Resources
Public Body
Public Officer
Recipient of EU Programmes
Refugee
Religious Believer
Religious Person
Research Volunteer
Researcher
Sex Worker
Soldier
Sportsperson
Statutory Auditor
Student
Subsidiary Status
Taxpayer
Teacher
Technology Transfer Professional
Third Country National
Transgender Person
Transsexual Person
User
Voluntary
Vulnerable Person
Waste Producer and Waste Holder
Woman
Worker.
Summary
This Dictionary analyses the ways in which the statuses of European citizens are profoundly affected by EU law. The study of one's particular status (as a worker, consumer, family member, citizen, etc.) helps to reconsider the legal notions concerning an individual's status at the EU level. The Dictionary includes a foreword by Evgeni Tanchev, Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union, which illustrates some interesting features of the Court's case law on statuses. The Dictionary's core is composed of 79 chapters, published in alphabetical order. Each brief chapter analyses how the individual status was conditioned or created by contemporary EU law, or how the process of European integration modified the traditional juridical definition of the respective status. The Dictionary provides answers to the following questions: Has the process of European integration modified the traditional juridical definition of individual status? Has the concept of legal status now acquired a new function? What role has EU law played in developing a new modern function for the concept of individual status? Are the selection of a specific individual status by EU law and the proliferation of such statuses, which is synonymous with the creation of new privileges, collectively undermining the goal of achieving substantive equality between EU citizens? Does this constitute a return to the past? Under EU law, is it possible to create a uniform definition of the legal status of the person, over and above the definition that is provided by a given Member State's legal system?
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Language
English
ISBN
9783030005542
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