The article analyses the jurisprudence of international tribunals on the education and housing of Roma and Travellers to understand whether positive obligations can change the hearts and minds of the majority and promote minority identities. Case law on education deals with integration rather than cultural specificities, while in the context of housing it accommodates minority needs. Positive obligations have achieved a higher level of compliance in the latter context by requiring majorities to tolerate the minority way of life in overwhelmingly segregated settings. Conversely, little seems to have changed in education, where legal and institutional reform, as well as a shift in both majority and minority attitudes, would be necessary to dismantle social distance and generate mutual trust. The interlocking factors of accessibility, judicial activism, European politics, expectations of political allegiance and community resources explain jurisprudential developments. The weak justiciability of minority rights, the lack of resources internal to the community and dual identities among the Eastern Roma impede legal claims for culture-specific accommodation in education. Conversely, the protection of minority identity and community ties is of paramount importance in the housing context, subsumed under the right to private and family life. |
Zoekresultaat: 22 artikelen
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 3 2020 |
Trefwoorden | Roma, Travellers, positive obligations, segregation, culturally adequate accommodation |
Auteurs | Lilla Farkas en Theodoros Alexandridis |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2020 |
Trefwoorden | effectiveness, effectiveness measurement methodologies, financial legislation, legislative objective, product approval governance |
Auteurs | Jeroen Koomans |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
How can you determine if financial legislation is effective? This article seeks to identify three characteristics that make up the basis for an effectiveness review, being the determination what the legislative objective is, who is it aimed at and what approach is taken to achieve this objective. Determining the legislative objective may prove to be a challenging undertaking, and the uncertainties that come with that affect the other two characteristics as well. And even if a clear legislative objective can be established, how can you be sure that its achievement was in fact attributable to the legislation under review? What do you compare your results to absent a baseline measurement and how can the vast number of variables that affect the effectiveness of the legislation under review be accounted for, if at all? Is effectiveness in financial legislation at all measurable and, when measured, what is its value in practice? |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 3 2019 |
Trefwoorden | Mercosur, European Union, regionalism, integration, international organisation |
Auteurs | Ricardo Caichiolo |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This study is focused on the evaluation of successes and failures of the Common Market of the South (Mercosur). This analysis of Mercosur’s integration seeks to identify the reasons why the bloc has stagnated in an incomplete customs union condition, although it was originally created to achieve a common market status. To understand the evolution of Mercosur, the study offers some thoughts about the role of the European Union (EU) as a model for regional integration. Although an EU-style integration has served as a model, it does not necessarily set the standards by which integration can be measured as we analyse other integration efforts. However, the case of Mercosur is emblematic: during its initial years, Mercosur specifically received EU technical assistance to promote integration according to EU-style integration. Its main original goal was to become a common market, but so far, almost thirty years after its creation, it remains an imperfect customs union. |
Artikel |
The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in PracticeA Comparative Analysis of the Role of Courts |
Tijdschrift | Handicap & Recht, Aflevering 1 2019 |
Trefwoorden | CRPD, disabilities, discrimination, court, human rights |
Auteurs | Prof. Dr. L.B. Waddington en Dr. A.C. Broderick |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
On the 25th and 26th October 2018, the Faculty of Law of Maastricht University hosted a conference on The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in Practice: A Comparative Analysis of the Role of Courts. This article presents some of the key findings of the conference and summarises several of the speakers’ contributions to the conference. |
Artikel |
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Tijdschrift | Crimmigratie & Recht, Aflevering 2 2018 |
Trefwoorden | article 1F, Refugee Convention, exclusion clauses, migrant smuggling, serious non-political crimes |
Auteurs | Anne Aagten LLL.M. |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In 2015, deadly incidents of migrant smuggling in the Mediterranean were daily covered by everyday newspapers. Empirical research has shown that migrants themselves may be involved in these smuggling operations. If they apply for refugee protection, they may be excluded from refugee status under Article 1F of the Refugee Convention. Article 1F(b) excludes asylum seekers from international protection if serious reasons exist to consider that they have committed serious non-political crimes. This contribution discusses whether migrant smuggling can be considered as such and whether various forms of participation in smuggling operations give rise to individual responsibility and trigger application of article 1F(b). |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2017 |
Trefwoorden | base erosion and profit shifting, OECD, G20, legitimacy, international tax reform |
Auteurs | Sissie Fung |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The global financial crisis of 2008 and the following public uproar over offshore tax evasion and corporate aggressive tax planning scandals gave rise to unprecedented international cooperation on tax information exchange and coordination on corporate tax reforms. At the behest of the G20, the OECD developed a comprehensive package of ‘consensus-based’ policy reform measures aimed to curb base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) by multinationals and to restore fairness and coherence to the international tax system. The legitimacy of the OECD/G20 BEPS Project, however, has been widely challenged. This paper explores the validity of the legitimacy concerns raised by the various stakeholders regarding the OECD/G20 BEPS Project. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2017 |
Trefwoorden | Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information, exercise of regulatory authority, due process requirements, peer review reports, legitimacy |
Auteurs | Leo E.C. Neve |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Global Forum on transparency and exchange of information for tax purposes has undertaken peer reviews on the implementation of the global standard of exchange of information on request, both from the perspective of formalities available and from the perspective of actual implementation. In the review reports Global Forum advises jurisdictions on required amendments of regulations and practices. With these advices, the Global Forum exercises regulatory authority. The article assesses the legitimacy of the exercise of such authority by the Global Forum and concludes that the exercise of such authority is not legitimate for the reason that the rule of law is abused by preventing jurisdictions to adhere to due process rules. |
Artikel |
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Tijdschrift | Law and Method, oktober 2017 |
Auteurs | Catalina Goanta |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
It is often claimed in the media and in political and academic debates that more law nurtures more research, which in turn should generate more information. However, the question researchers are left with is: What does this mean for comparative law and its methods? This paper takes the context of European consumer sales law as an example of the web of rules applicable at both European and national level. In this context, the main idea behind this article is that looking at law and research as data to be built upon and used in further analysis can revolutionise the way in which legal research is understood. This is because current research methods in European consumer sales law fall short of systematically analysing the essential weaknesses of the current regulation system. In this contribution, I argue that the volume of regulation in European consumer law is large enough for it to be considered Big Data and analysed in a way that can harness its potential in this respect. I exemplify this claim with a case-study consisting in the setting up of a Convergence Index that maps the converging effect of harmonizing policies adopted by the European legislator in the field of |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 1 2017 |
Trefwoorden | flawed legislation, tax privileges, tax planning, corporate social responsibility, tax professionals |
Auteurs | Hans Gribnau |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The international tax system is the result of the interaction of different actors who share the responsibility for its integrity. States and multinational corporations both enjoy to a certain extent freedom of choice with regard to their tax behaviour – which entails moral responsibility. Making, interpreting and using tax rules therefore is inevitably a matter of exercising responsibility. Both should abstain from viewing tax laws as a bunch of technical rules to be used as a tool without any intrinsic moral or legal value. States bear primary responsibility for the integrity of the international tax system. They should become more reticent in their use of tax as regulatory instrument – competing with one another for multinationals’ investment. They should also act more responsibly by cooperating to make better rules to prevent aggressive tax planning, which entails a shift in tax payments from very expert taxpayers to other taxpayers. Here, the distributive justice of the tax system and a level playing field should be guaranteed. Multinationals should abstain from putting pressure on states and lobbying for favourable tax rules that disproportionally affect other taxpayers – SMEs and individual taxpayers alike. Multinationals and their tax advisers should avoid irresponsible conduct by not aiming to pay a minimalist amount of (corporate income) taxes – merely staying within the boundaries of the letter of the law. Especially CSR-corporations should assume the responsibility for the integrity of the tax system. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Trefwoorden | E-health, e-mental health, right to health, right to mental health |
Auteurs | Fatemeh Kokabisaghi, Iris Bakx en Blerta Zenelaj |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
People with mental illness usually experience higher rates of disability and mortality. Often, health care systems do not adequately respond to the burden of mental disorders worldwide. The number of health care providers dealing with mental health care is insufficient in many countries. Equal access to necessary health services should be granted to mentally ill people without any discrimination. E-mental health is expected to enhance the quality of care as well as accessibility, availability and affordability of services. This paper examines under what conditions e-mental health can contribute to realising the right to health by using the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality (AAAQ) framework that is developed by the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Research shows e-mental health facilitates dissemination of information, remote consultation and patient monitoring and might increase access to mental health care. Furthermore, patient participation might increase, and stigma and discrimination might be reduced by the use of e-mental health. However, e-mental health might not increase the access to health care for everyone, such as the digitally illiterate or those who do not have access to the Internet. The affordability of this service, when it is not covered by insurance, can be a barrier to access to this service. In addition, not all e-mental health services are acceptable and of good quality. Policy makers should adopt new legal policies to respond to the present and future developments of modern technologies in health, as well as e-Mental health. To analyse the impact of e-mental health on the right to health, additional research is necessary. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 4 2015 |
Trefwoorden | judiciary, judge-made justice, court fees, legal aid, ADR-methods |
Auteurs | Laura Carballo Piñeiro en Jordi Nieva Fenoll |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Spanish justice system has been shaken by the economic downturn as many other institutions have. This article addresses in the first place some statistical data that shed light as regards to the number of judges and the costs and length of the procedure in Spain. These figures help to understand, in the second place, the impact of austerity measures on the judiciary, namely, the freeze on the hiring of judges and the establishing of high court fees. While they mainly concern the supply side of justice services, others such cost reductions in legal aid have had, in the third place, an impact on the demand side, driving many citizens to social exclusion and to resorting to self-defence mechanisms. The final part of this article addresses some remedies that may alleviate judiciary’s workload, but that fall short of doing it. All in all, the Spanish justice system seems to require a holistic approach to patch up edges, but one in which the role of judge-made justice in a democratic society has to be central again. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 3 2014 |
Auteurs | Laura Maria van Bochove Ph.D. |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Rome I Regulation on the law applicable to contractual obligations contains several provisions aimed explicitly at the protection of ‘weaker’ contracting parties, such as consumers and employees. However, in addition to this, the interests of weaker parties are sometimes also safeguarded through the application of ‘overriding mandatory provisions’, which are superimposed on the law applicable to the contract to protect a fundamental interest of a Member State. This article is an attempt to clarify the extent to which the concept of overriding mandatory provisions may serve as a vehicle for weaker party protection. To do this, it examines the definition and limitations of the concept and its relation to conflict of laws rules based on the protective principle. Finally, the article seeks to establish whether the doctrine of overriding mandatory provisions remains relevant in the case of harmonisation of substantive law at the EU level, for which it will differentiate between full and minimum harmonisation. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 3 2014 |
Trefwoorden | private international law, applicable law, overriding mandatory provisions, transnational employment relations, posting of workers |
Auteurs | Prof.dr. Aukje A.H. Ms van Hoek |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The regulation of transnational employment in the European Union operates at the crossroads between private international law and internal market rules. The private international law rules are currently laid down in the Rome I Regulation. This regulation is complemented by the Posted Workers Directive, a directive based on the competences of the EU in the field of free movement of services. The current contribution first describes the rules which determine the law applicable to the employment contract under Article 8 Rome I Regulation and the way these rules are interpreted by the CJEU before critically analysing these rules and the reasoning that seems to lie behind the court’s interpretation (section 2). The law applying to the contract is, however, only of limited relevance for the protection of posted workers. This is due inter alia to the mandatory application of certain rules of the country to which the workers are posted, even if a different law governs their contract. This application of host state law is based on Article 9 Rome I Regulation in conjunction with the Posted Workers Directive. Section 3 describes the content of these rules and the – to some extent still undecided – interaction between the Rome I Regulation and the PWD. The conclusion will be that there is an uneasy match between the interests informing private international law and the interests of the internal market, which is not likely to be resolved in the near future. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 1 2014 |
Trefwoorden | tax competition, tax planning, European Union, Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base, factor manipulation |
Auteurs | Maarten de Wilde LL.M |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The author addresses the phenomenon of taxable profit-shifting operations undertaken by multinationals in response to countries competing for corporate tax bases within the European Union. The central question is whether this might be a relic of the past when the European Commission’s proposal for a Council Directive on a Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base sees the light of day. Or would the EU-wide corporate tax system provide incentives for multinationals to pursue artificial tax base-shifting practices within the EU, potentially invigorating the risk of undue governmental tax competition responses? The author’s tentative answer on the potential for artificial base shifting and undue tax competition is in the affirmative. Today, the issue of harmful tax competition within the EU seems to have been pushed back as a result of the soft law approaches that were initiated in the late 1990s and early 2000s. But things might change if the CCCTB proposal as currently drafted enters into force. There may be a risk that substantial parts of the EU tax base would instantly become mobile as of that day. As the EU Member States at that time seem to have only a single tool available to respond to this – the tax rate – that may perhaps initiate an undesirable race for the EU tax base, at least theoretically. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2013 |
Trefwoorden | Eclecticism, corporate law & economics, corporate constitutionalism, loyalty-promoting instruments |
Auteurs | Bart Bootsma MSc LLM |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This essay analyses the shareholder role in corporate governance in terms of Albert Hirschman's Exit, Voice, and Loyalty. The term 'exit' is embedded in a law & economics framework, while 'voice' relates to a corporate constitutional framework. The essay takes an eclectic approach and argues that, in order to understand the shareholder role in its full breadth and depth, the corporate law & economics framework can 'share the analytical stage' with a corporate constitutional framework. It is argued that Hirschman's concept of 'loyalty' is the connecting link between the corporate law & economics and corporate constitutional framework. Corporate law is perceived as a Janus head, as it is influenced by corporate law & economics as well as by corporate constitutional considerations. In the discussion on the shareholder role in public corporations, it is debated whether corporate law should facilitate loyalty-promoting instruments, such as loyalty dividend and loyalty warrants. In this essay, these instruments are analysed based on the eclectic approach. It is argued that loyalty dividend and warrants are law & economics instruments (i.e. financial incentives) based on corporate constitutional motives (i.e. promoting loyalty in order to change the exit/voice mix in favour of voice). |
Artikel |
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Tijdschrift | Law and Method, 2012 |
Trefwoorden | legal methodology, law as an academic discipline, ‘law and …’-movements, legal theory, innovative and multiform legal scholarship |
Auteurs | Jan Vranken |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Until recently, legal-dogmatic research stood at the undisputed pinnacle of legal scientific research. The last few years saw increasing criticism, both nationally and internationally, levelled at this type of research or at its dominant role. Some see this as a crisis in legal scholarship, but a closer look reveals a great need for facts, common sense, and nuance. Critics usually base their calls for innovation on a one-dimensional and flawed image of legal-dogmatic research. In this article, the author subsequently addresses the various critical opinions themselves and provide an overview of the innovations that are proposed. He concludes that there are a lot of efforts to innovate legal scholarship, and that the field is more multiform than ever, which is a wonderful and unprecedented state of affairs. This multiformity should be cherished and given plenty of room to develop and grow, because most innovative movements are still fledgling and need time, sometimes a lot of time, to increase in quality. It would be a shame to nip them in the bud now, merely because they are still finding their way. In turn, none of these innovative movements have cause to disqualify legal-dogmatic research, as sometimes happens (implicitly), by first creating a straw-man version of the field and then dismissing it as uninteresting or worse. That only polarises the discussion and gains us nothing. Progress can only be achieved through cooperation, with an open mind towards different types of legal research and a willingness to accept a critical approach towards their development. In the end, the only criterion that matters is quality. All types of research are principally subject to the same quality standards. The author provides some clarification regarding these standards as well. |
Artikel |
OPTA: klem tussen CBb en Commissie? Over regulering, onmacht en overmacht |
Tijdschrift | Nederlands tijdschrift voor Europees recht, Aflevering 5 2012 |
Trefwoorden | voorrang Unierecht, tariefregulering, CBb, OPTA, bevoegdheid Commissie |
Auteurs | Mr. J.F.A. Doeleman |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Telecomtoezichthouder OPTA stelt elke drie jaar plafonds vast voor bepaalde groothandelstarieven. Voor de berekening van deze plafonds hanteert OPTA een door de Commissie aanbevolen methode. Het laatste besluit – voor de periode juli 2010 tot juli 2013 – werd in augustus 2011 door het CBb vernietigd. De rechter voorzag deels zelf in de zaak en droeg OPTA voor het overige op vóór 1 januari 2012 een herstelbesluit te nemen waarin de betrokken tariefplafonds volgens een andere dan de door de Commissie aanbevolen methode werden berekend. De Commissie verhindert dat nu met een ‘standstill’. OPTA moet van het CBb rechtsaf, maar de Commissie wil dat zij linksaf gaat. Een toezichthouder tussen Scylla en Charybdis. |
Artikel |
Waarom het transparantiebeginsel maar niet transparant wil worden |
Tijdschrift | Nederlands tijdschrift voor Europees recht, Aflevering 7 2011 |
Trefwoorden | transparantiebeginsel, aanbestedingsrecht, rechtszekerheid, vrij verkeer |
Auteurs | Mr. A.W.G.J. Buijze |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Het Europese transparantiebeginsel breidt zich uit als een olievlek over de zee van het Europese recht. Nu meer en meer rechtsgebieden onder de reikwijdte van het transparantiebeginsel vallen, wordt het steeds moeilijker het belang van het beginsel voor het Nederlandse recht te ontkennen. Toch blijft het moeilijk te preciseren wat het transparantiebeginsel precies vereist. In dit artikel wordt betoogd dat de sleutel ligt in het instrumentele karakter van het transparantiebeginsel: steeds is een mate van transparantie vereist die zo goed mogelijk bijdraagt aan het realiseren van de doelen die in een bepaalde context bij transparantie zijn gediend. |
Artikel |
Het Alassini arrest en verplichte bemiddeling |
Tijdschrift | Nederlands-Vlaams tijdschrift voor mediation en conflictmanagement, Aflevering 2 2010 |
Trefwoorden | Universal Service Directive 2002/22/EU, mediation, conciliation, prejudicial question |
Auteurs | Rob Jagtenberg |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In the case of Rosalba Alassini v. Telecom Italia SpA the Court of Justice of the European Union has for the first time decided (18 March 2010) on the compatibility of a (Italian) statute mandatorily prescribing conciliation prior to application to a Court of Law, whereby the compatibility test was based on various European general principles of law. The author provides a critical comment on some inconsistencies in the judgment and the A-G’s earlier Opinion. |
Artikel |
De onderhandelplicht in het telecommunicatierecht en onderhandelingen volgens het algemene verbintenissenrecht |
Tijdschrift | Contracteren, Aflevering 01 2007 |
Trefwoorden | interconnectie, goede trouw, overeenkomst, contract, contractsvrijheid, OPTA, burgerlijk recht, burgerlijk rechter, verbintenissenrecht, aansprakelijkheid |
Auteurs | S.J.H. Gijrath |