The Supreme Court has decided that the summary dismissal of an employee for violating a Covid-19 quarantine order by appearing at work is effective and justified. |
Zoekresultaat: 61 artikelen
Case Reports |
2022/7 Dismissal for violation of Covid-19 quarantine order (AT) |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 1 2022 |
Trefwoorden | Unfair dismissal |
Auteurs | Andreas Tinhofer en Isabella Göschl |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Article |
|
Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2021 |
Trefwoorden | Habeas corpus, common law, detainee, consitution, liberty |
Auteurs | Chuks Okpaluba en Anthony Nwafor |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Long before the coming of the Bill of Rights in written Constitutions, the common law has had the greatest regard for the personal liberty of the individual. In order to safeguard that liberty, the remedy of habeas corpus was always available to persons deprived of their liberty unlawfully. This ancient writ has been incorporated into the modern Constitution as a fundamental right and enforceable as other rights protected by virtue of their entrenchment in those Constitutions. This article aims to bring together the various understanding of habeas corpus at common law and the principles governing the writ in common law jurisdictions. The discussion is approached through a twelve-point construct thus providing a brief conspectus of the subject matter, such that one could have a better understanding of the subject as applied in most common law jurisdictions. |
Case Reports |
2021/30 ‘Gender critical’ beliefs are protected philosophical beliefs (UK) |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 3 2021 |
Trefwoorden | Other Forms of Discrimination |
Auteurs | Bethan Carney |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has ruled that ‘gender critical’ beliefs are protected philosophical beliefs for equality law purposes, while confirming that a belief in ‘gender identity’ is also a protected characteristic. This means that it is unlawful to discriminate against someone because they do or do not hold either of those beliefs. |
Rulings |
ECJ 11 February 2021, Joined Cases C-407/19 and C-471/19 (Katoen Natie Bulk Terminals and General Services Antwerp), Other Forms of Free MovementKatoen Natie Bulk Terminals NV and General Services Antwerp NV – v – Belgische Staat and Middlegate Europe NV – v – Ministerraad, Belgian cases |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 1 2021 |
Trefwoorden | Other Forms of Free Movement |
Samenvatting |
Legislation which reserves dock work to recognised workers may be compatible with EU law if it is aimed at ensuring safety in port areas and preventing workplace accidents. However, the intervention of a joint administrative committee in the recognition of dockers is neither necessary nor appropriate for attaining the objective pursued. |
Case Law |
|
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 1 2021 |
Auteurs | Ruben Houweling, Daiva Petrylaitė, Marianne Hrdlicka e.a. |
Samenvatting |
Various of our academic board analysed employment law cases from last year. However, first, we start with some general remarks. |
Artikel |
|
Tijdschrift | Family & Law, januari 2021 |
Trefwoorden | Private intercountry adoptions, surrogacy, ECHR, UNCRC, the best interests of the child |
Auteurs | dr. E.C. Loibl |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Within the past half century, a market in adoptable children has emerged. The imbalance between the demand for and the supply of adoptable children, combined with the large sums of Western money, incite greedy actors in poor countries to illegally obtain children for adoption. This renders intercountry adoption conducive to abuses. Private adoptions are particularly prone to abusive and commercial practices. Yet, although they violate both international and national law, German and Dutch family courts commonly recognize them. They argue that removing the child from the illegal adopters would not be compatible with the rights and best interests of the individual child concerned. In 2017, the ECtHR rendered a ground-breaking judgement in Campanelli and Paradiso v. Italy. In this case, the Court dealt with the question as to whether removing a child from the care of an Italian couple that entered into a surrogacy agreement with a Russian clinic, given that surrogacy is illegal in Italy, violated Article 8 ECHR. Contrary to previous case law, in which the ECtHR placed a strong emphasis on the best interests of the individual child concerned, the Court attached more weight to the need to prevent disorder and crime by putting an end to the illegal situation created by the Italian couple and by discouraging others from bypassing national laws. The article argues that considering the shifting focus of the ECtHR on the prevention of unlawful conduct and, thus, on the best interests of children in general, the German and Dutch courts’ failure to properly balance the different interests at stake in a private international adoption by mainly focusing on the individual rights and interests of the children is difficult to maintain. --- In de afgelopen halve eeuw is er een markt voor adoptiekinderen ontstaan. De disbalans tussen de vraag naar en het aanbod van adoptiekinderen, in combinatie met grote sommen westers geld, zet hebzuchtige actoren in arme landen ertoe aan illegaal kinderen te verkrijgen voor adoptie. Dit maakt interlandelijke adoptie bevorderlijk voor misbruik. Particuliere adoptie is bijzonder vatbaar voor misbruik en commerciële praktijken. Ondanks het feit dat deze privé-adopties in strijd zijn met zowel internationaal als nationaal recht, worden ze door Duitse en Nederlandse familierechtbanken doorgaans wel erkend. Daartoe wordt aangevoerd dat het verwijderen van het kind van de illegale adoptanten niet verenigbaar is met de rechten en belangen van het individuele kind in kwestie. In 2017 heeft het EHRM een baanbrekende uitspraak gedaan in de zaak Campanelli en Paradiso t. Italië. In deze zaak behandelde het Hof de vraag of het verwijderen van een kind uit de zorg van een Italiaans echtpaar dat een draagmoederschapsovereenkomst met een Russische kliniek is aangegaan, in strijd is met artikel 8 EVRM, daarbij in ogenschouw genomen dat draagmoederschap in Italië illegaal is. In tegenstelling tot eerdere jurisprudentie, waarin het EHRM sterk de nadruk legde op de belangen van het individuele kind, hechtte het Hof meer gewicht aan de noodzaak om de openbare orde te bewaken en criminaliteit te voorkomen door een einde te maken aan de illegale situatie die door het Italiaanse echtpaar was gecreëerd door onder andere het omzeilen van nationale wetten. Het artikel stelt dat, gezien de verschuiving in de focus van het EHRM op het voorkomen van onwettig gedrag en dus op het belang van kinderen in het algemeen, de Duitse en Nederlandse rechtbanken, door met name te focussen op de individuele rechten en belangen van de kinderen, er niet in slagen om de verschillende belangen die op het spel staan bij een particuliere internationale adoptie goed af te wegen. |
Artikel |
|
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 1 2020 |
Trefwoorden | Certificate of conduct, Employment, Prisoners, re-entry, prisoner re-entry |
Auteurs | Dr. Anke Ramakers |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
It is unclear to what extent criminal record screening policies can explain low employment rates after release. This descriptive study provides more insight into this matter by examining whether ex-prisoners applied for a certificate of conduct, found employment and whether this job was found without such a certificate. To answer these questions interview data on ex-prisoners (N=931) are combined with data on criminal record screenings. Only 6 percent applied for a certificate, half of which were granted. Many ex-prisoners did not report any employment, but almost all working ex-prisoners found this job without a certificate. These findings bring nuance to discussions on the role of criminal record screening after release. |
Artikel |
|
Tijdschrift | Family & Law, april 2020 |
Trefwoorden | Family life |
Auteurs | Dr. N. Hyder-Rahman |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article engages in a comparison of the regulation of PR in the Netherlands and the UK (specifically England and Wales). The latter is a good comparator as it operates a similar regulatory approach to the Netherlands, that of conditional acceptance of PR, the condition being (prior) consent. Furthermore, the UK boasts a more detailed and mature legal framework that continues to be tested through caselaw, and thus offers insight into how a regulatory approach conditional upon the (prior) consent of the deceased can fare. --- Dit artikel vergelijkt de regulering van postume reproductie (PR) in Nederland en het Verenigd Koninkrijk (in het bijzonder Engeland en Wales). Laatstgenoemde is daarvoor zeer geschikt, aangezien het VK een vergelijkbare reguleringsbenadering heeft als Nederland, namelijk de voorwaardelijke acceptatie van PR, waarbij (voorafgaande) toestemming de voorwaarde is. Bovendien beschikt het VK over een gedetailleerder en volwassener juridisch kader dat continu wordt getoetst door middel van rechtspraak. Dit kader biedt daarmee inzicht in hoe een regulerende benadering met als voorwaarde (voorafgaande) toestemming van de overledene kan verlopen. |
Wetenschap |
Human Rights Provisions in General Corporate LendingHow banks could implement their responsibility to respect human rights by including human rights provisions in corporate lending documentation |
Tijdschrift | Onderneming en Financiering, Aflevering 1 2020 |
Trefwoorden | Banks, Human rights, Corporate lending, Sustainability linked loans, LMA |
Auteurs | Mr. W.B. de Boer en Prof. M. Scheltema |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article focusses on the role of banks in the area of human rights and corporate lending. By including contractual provisions on human rights in loan documentation, banks can manage human rights risks. Banks could hereby build on the emerging practice of the ‘sustainability linked loans’ by including predetermined sustainability targets focused on human rights. The international loan market currently lacks a level playing field on including human rights provisions. This article concludes with providing guidance for human rights provisions in loan agreements, based on standard loan market (LMA) documentation. |
Article |
|
Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2019 |
Trefwoorden | web harvesting, data analysis, text & data mining, TDM: Proposal EU Copyright Directive |
Auteurs | Maria Bottis, Marinos Papadopoulos, Christos Zampakolas e.a. |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This conference paper submitted on the occasion of the 8th International Conference on Information Law and Ethics (University of Antwerp, December 13-14, 2018) that focused on modern intellectual property governance and openness in Europe elaborates upon the Text and Data Mining (TDM) issue in the field of scientific research, which is still-by the time of composition of this paper-in the process of discussion and forthcoming voting before the European Parliament in the form of provision(s) included in a new Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market. TDM is included in the proposal for a Directive of the European parliament and of the Council on copyright in the Digital Single Market-Proposal COM(2016)593 final 2016/0280(COD) that was submitted to the European Parliament. |
Article |
|
Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2019 |
Trefwoorden | Medical Device Directive, Medical Device Regulation, regulatory, European Union, reform, innovation, SPCs, policy |
Auteurs | Magali Contardi |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Similar to pharmaceutical products, medical devices play an increasingly important role in healthcare worldwide by contributing substantially to the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of diseases. From the patent law perspective both, pharmaceutical products and a medical apparatus, product or device can be patented if they meet the patentability requirements, which are novelty, inventiveness and entail industrial applicability. However, regulatory issues also impact on the whole cycle of the innovation. At a European level, enhancing competitiveness while ensuring public health and safety is one of the key objectives of the European Commission. This article undertakes literature review of the current and incoming regulatory framework governing medical devices with the aim of highlighting how these major changes would affect the industry at issue. The analysis is made in the framework of an on-going research work aimed to determine whether SPCs are needed for promoting innovation in the medical devices industry. A thorough analysis the aforementioned factors affecting medical device’s industry will allow the policymakers to understand the root cause of any optimal patent term and find appropriate solutions. |
Article |
|
Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2019 |
Trefwoorden | Web harvesting, data analysis, text & data mining, TDM, computational text |
Auteurs | Maria Bottis, Marinos Papadopoulos, Christos Zampakolas e.a. |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Text and Data Mining (hereinafter, TDM) issue for the purpose of scientific research or for any other purpose which is included in the provisions of the new EU Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market (hereinafter, DSM). TDM is a term that includes Web harvesting and Web Archiving activities. Web harvesting and archiving pertains to the processes of collecting from the web and archiving of works that reside on the Web. In the following analysis we will elaborate briefly upon provisions in EU Copyright law which were discussed during the proposal for a new Directive on Copyright in the DSM as well as provisions which are included in the text of art.3 and art.4 of the new Directive 2019/790/EU per TDM. In addition, the following analysis presents legislation in very few EU Member States which pertains to TDM and preceded the rulings of Directive 2019/790/EU. Digital legal deposit remarkable examples from EU Member States are also presented in this paper. The example of Australia is also presented below hereto because it is one of the oldest and most successful worldwide. The National Library of Australia’s digital legal deposit is state-of-the-art. |
Artikel |
Verplichte court-ordered mediation in commerciële geschillen in Australië, een voorbeeld voor Europese landen? |
Tijdschrift | Nederlands-Vlaams tijdschrift voor mediation en conflictmanagement, Aflevering 2-3 2019 |
Trefwoorden | Verplichte doorverwijzing, Australië, vrijwilligheid, Commerciële geschillen |
Auteurs | Justus Hoefnagel |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In this article, the author discusses mediation law and practice in Australia, with a focus on commercial disputes. Statistical data collected in several Australian jurisdictions suggest that mandatory referral works out positively. The author concludes with some observations as to the potential usefulness of the Australian model for court-referred mediation in Europe. |
Pending Cases |
Case C-407/19, Free movement, fixed-term workKatoen Natie Bulk Terminals NV, General Services Antwerp NV – v – Belgische Staat, reference lodged by the Raad van State (Belgium) on 24 May 2019 |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 4 2019 |
Trefwoorden | Free movement, fixed-term work |
Pending Cases |
Case C-370/17, Social InsuranceCaisse de retraite du personnel navigant professionnel de l’aéronautique civile (CRPNPAC) – v – Vueling Airlines SA, reference lodged by the Tribunal de grande instance de Bobigny (France) on 19 June 2017 |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 2 2019 |
Artikel |
A Look Back at Courage and a Look Forward to the Future of Non-Contractual Liability of Individuals for Breaches of EU Law |
Tijdschrift | Maandblad voor Vermogensrecht, Aflevering 7-8 2019 |
Trefwoorden | non-contractual liability, compensation, direct horizontal effect, effectiveness, effective judicial protection |
Auteurs | F. Bassi LL.M. |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Courage ruling establishes that private parties are liable to compensate other private parties for the harm caused by a breach of Art. 101(1) TFEU. This article discusses whether a breach by private parties of other provisions of the TFEU with ‘direct horizontal effect’ also gives rise to non-contractual liability and what are the conditions for such liability to arise. |
Artikel |
|
Tijdschrift | Nederlands-Vlaams tijdschrift voor mediation en conflictmanagement, Aflevering 1 2019 |
Trefwoorden | succession mediation, cross-border mediation, Research, Mediation Directive, Succession Regulation |
Auteurs | Judith Pfützenreuter |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The two years FOMENTO project ‘Fostering Mediation in cross-border civil and succession matters’ aims to contribute to conflict prevention in cross-border succession matters. To reach a deeper understanding and impulses for a correct implementation of Directive 2008/52/EC (Mediation Directive) and of Regulation (EU) No. 650/2012 (Succession Regulation) the effects of both regulations have been analyzed in a research study. To this end, country reports about the implementation of the Succession Regulation and the Mediation Directive in six European countries (Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Sweden) have been assembled and 105 expert interviews with lawyers, notaries, judges and mediators have been conducted and analyzed. |
Law Review |
2019/1 EELC’s review of the year 2018 |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 1 2019 |
Auteurs | Ruben Houweling, Catherine Barnard, Filip Dorssemont e.a. |
Samenvatting |
For the second time, various of our academic board analysed employment law cases from last year. However, first, we start with some general remarks. |
Article |
|
Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 4 2018 |
Trefwoorden | German maritime security, private armed security, privately contracted armed security personnel, anti-piracy-measures, state oversight |
Auteurs | Tim R. Salomon |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Germany reacted to the rise of piracy around the Horn of Africa not only by deploying its armed forces to the region, but also by overhauling the legal regime concerning private security providers. It introduced a dedicated licensing scheme mandatory for German maritime security providers and maritime security providers wishing to offer their services on German-flagged vessels. This legal reform resulted in a licensing system with detailed standards for the internal organisation of a security company and the execution of maritime security services. Content wise, the German law borrows broadly from internationally accepted standards. Despite deficits in state oversight and compliance control, the licensing scheme sets a high standard e.g. by mandating that a security team must consist of a minimum of four security guards. The lacking success of the scheme suggested by the low number of companies still holding a license may be due to the fact that ship-owners have traditionally been reluctant to travel high-risk areas under the German flag. Nevertheless, the German law is an example of a national regulation that has had some impact on the industry at large. |
Article |
|
Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 4 2018 |
Trefwoorden | piracy, private security companies (PSC), privately contracted armed security personnel (PCASP), use of force, Denmark |
Auteurs | Christian Frier |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article examines the legal issues pertaining to the use of civilian armed guards on board Danish-flagged ships for protection against piracy. The Danish model of regulation is interesting for several reasons. Firstly, the Danish Government was among the first European flag States to allow and formalise their use in a commercial setting. Secondly, the distribution of assignments between public authorities and private actors stands out as very pragmatic, as ship owners and contracting private security companies are empowered with competences which are traditionally considered as public administrative powers. Thirdly, the lex specialis framework governing the authorisation and use of force in self-defence is non-exhaustive, thus referring to lex generalis regulation, which does not take the special circumstances surrounding the use of armed guards into consideration. As a derived effect the private actors involved rely heavily on soft law and industry self-regulation instrument to complement the international and national legal framework. |