Description
Book SynopsisThe book is of interest to scholars, students and practitioners working on international law, European Union law, or both, who wish to understand how the customary rules that we find on the international plane is relevant to the external relations and to the internal functioning of the EU.
Table of ContentsIntroduction: the European Union and customary international law Fernando Lusa Bordin, Andreas Th. Müller and Francisco Pascual-Vives; Part I. A View from the Outside: The European Union as a Subject of Customary International Law: 1. Applicability of customary international law to the European Union as a sui generis international organization: an international law perspective Christina Binder and Jane A. Hofbauer; 2. Is the European Union a sui generis international organization? The challenge of arguing for special treatment in customary international law Fernando Lusa Bordin; 3. The European Union's role in the making and confirmation of customary international law Jed Odermatt; Part II. Looking in Between: Synergies between Customary International Law and European Union Law: 4. Customary law within the internal legal sphere of the European Union: a tale of autonomy and self-containment Kirsten Schmalenbach; 5. The identification of customary international law before the court of justice of the European Union: a flexible consensualism Francisco Pascual-Vives; 6. Patterns of avoidance and assimilation: peremptory norms in European Union Law Asier Garrido-Muñoz; Part III. A View from the Inside: Customary International Law as a Source of European Union Law: 7. Customary international law in the European Union legal system: reception, rank, application and interpretation Werner Schroeder; 8. The direct effect of customary international law: the 'treaty analogy' and its limits Andreas Th. Müller; 9. Customary international law in the European Union legal system: the substantive rules invoked and applied by the Court of Justice of the European Union Paul Gragl; 10. Customary international law as a source of European Union law: the European parliament, the council and the commission Carmen Martínez-Capdevila.