EUROPEAN AND INTERNATIONAL LAWS

Course objectives

Knowledge and understanding: students will be able to have an advanced understanding of the constitutional and material questions of the EU Law, the functioning of the European Union institutions and the legislation made under the Treaties. Applying knowledge and understanding: students will be able to have a basic knowledge on the proceedings in front of the European Court of Justice and on topics as citizenship and non-discrimination. Making judgement: students will develop an autonomous judgment capability on the fundamentals of European Union law, in a historical, theoretical, and critical perspective. Communication skills: students will develop an attitude to legal reasoning and the ability to discuss on the fundamentals of European Union law. Learning skills: At the end of the course, the students will be familiar with the basic rules governing the EU.

Channel 1
MAURIZIO ORLANDI Lecturers' profile

Program - Frequency - Exams

Course program
Historical framework of the discipline of international economic relations. Investment protection. Development aid Economic cooperation in the monetary field. The regulation of international trade in the WTO system. The European customs union and the free movement of production factors in the internal market. Competition law in the European internal market: Antitrust and State aid.
Prerequisites
It is suggested (but not mandatory) to have passed the European Union Law exam
Books
The Max Planck Encyclopedia of public international Law, Oxford University press, Oxford 2015, only following parts: C. SCHREURER, Investment, International Protection, p. 559. C. SCHREURER, International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), p. 383. S. SCHLEMMER-SCHULTE, International Monetary Fund, p. 472. P.-T. STOLL, World Trade Organization (WTO), Oxford 2015. W. BENEDEK, General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (1947 and 1994), p. 302. J.P. TERHECHTE, Non Tariff Barriers to Trade, p. 684. G. MARCEAU, J. TRACHTMAN, Technical Barriers to Trade, p. 788. K. ADAMANTOUPOLOS, J.P. BECK, Subsidies International Restrictions, p. 752. E. VERMULST Anti-Dumping, in International Economic Law, p. 15. P.-T. STOLL, World Trade Organization, Dispute Settlement, p. 931. and C.Barnard & Steve Peers European Union Law, Oxford University press, Oxford 2017 only chapters 11. J. SNELL, The Internal Market and the philosophies of market integration, p. 310-338. 12. P. OLIVER, M. MARTÍNEZ NAVARRO, Free Movement of goods, p. 339-368. 13. C. BARNARD, Free movement of natural person and citizenship of the Union, p. 369-408. 14. C. BARNARD, J. SNELL, Free movement of legal persons and the provision of services, p. 409-446. 15. L. FLYNN, Free movement of capital, p. 447-476 17. A. JONES, C TOWNLEY, Competition law, p. 509-542 19 A. HINAREJOS, Economic and Monetary Union . p. 573-597.
Teaching mode
Classic lectures
Frequency
optional
Exam mode
Oral exams
Lesson mode
Classic lectures
  • Lesson code10609396
  • Academic year2024/2025
  • CourseGreen Industrial Engineering for Sustainable Development
  • CurriculumSUSTAINABLE PROCESSES
  • Year1st year
  • Semester2nd semester
  • SSDIUS/14
  • CFU6
  • Subject areaAmbito giuridico-economico