The EU Law Duty of Consistent Interpretation in German, Irish and Dutch Courts
- Author Sim Haket
- Publisher Lefebvre Sarrut Belgium NV
- ISBN 9781780688794
- Publication date 30-10-2019
- Country Belgium
- Language Dutch
- Availability In stock
- Free shipping
Description
The EU Law Duty of Consistent Interpretation in German, Irish and Dutch Courts considers the case law of the European Court of Justice which makes up the framework for the requirement to interpret national law so far as possible in conformity with EU law directives. It offers an in-depth analysis of the application of this obligation in three Member States Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands. The key question underlying this examination is to what extent the established theories of supremacy of EU law, national constitutionalism and constitutional pluralism adequately explain the relationship between EU and national law under the duty of consistent interpretation.br br In order to understand the duty of consistent interpretation and its interaction andor interference with national interpretative rules, this book includes an outline of the approach to interpretation in a non-EU law context for the three selected Member States. Both the duty of consistent interpretation and national interpretative rules are complex creatures and it can be particularly difficult to disentangle how they interact. The author develops a typology for understanding the different kinds of interaction, mainly, yet not exclusively, by asking under which circumstances it can be said that there exists a conflict of interpretative rules. The book also offers valuable lessons by discussing numerous judgments, highlighting the mutual responsiveness of the duty of consistent interpretation and national interpretative rules, as well as the reconciliatory attitude of national courts.br br Since the fit between consistent interpretation and theories on the relationship between EU and national law is examined, this book also investigates the explanatory value of those theories beyond the context in which they were primarily developed andor discussed, thereby contributing to an enriched understanding of those theories. The book is also of added value for practitioners as it discusses in detail how the duty of consistent interpretation is applied before the courts.Sim Haket is Assistant Professor of Constitutional Law, and part of the research institute Montaigne Centre for Rule of Law and Administration of Justice, at Utrecht University.br