Date: 2012
Type: Article
European Union Law as International Law
European Journal of Legal Studies, 2012, 5, 1, 126-143
MOORHEAD, Timothy, European Union Law as International Law, European Journal of Legal Studies, 2012, 5, 1, 126-143
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/24819
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
International law principles enable a rationalisation of the values to which the Union order aspires as a collective political and legal commitment amongst the Member States. The doctrine of Union law supremacy, which parallels that of international law supremacy, emphasises the overriding character of Union legal demands as a set of values and objectives over those of purely domestic origin. A common view that the Union legal order is sui generis or municipal in character fails to explain the directing character of the values underlying the Union project including its legal order. In this article I therefore explore and defend the view that the Union legal order is essentially one of international law. A central contention in this regard is that the supremacy of Union law obligations within the Member States is based on the principle of the supremacy of international law obligations over those originating in the domestic arena. The intensive rationalisation of this principle by the Court of Justice within its case law manages the intrusive domestic legal effects of the values and ideals found in the Union Treaties and illustrates the evolutionary character of the Union project.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/24819
ISSN: 1973-2937
External link: https://ejls.eui.eu/
Keyword(s): European Law International law