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dc.contributor.authorMICKLITZ, Hans-Wolfgang
dc.date.accessioned2011-02-16T14:45:13Z
dc.date.available2011-02-16T14:45:13Z
dc.date.issued2011-01-01
dc.identifier.issn1725-6739
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/15706
dc.descriptionI would like the thank R. Sefton-Green, H. Muir Watt, N. Reich, T. Roethe, C. Torp, G. Miller, K. Purnhagen for extremely helpful comments and B. Schüller not only for his support in my research, but also for interesting discussions over a couple of months. The responsibility for all errors and misconceptions, however, remains mine.en
dc.description.abstractDuring the C20th, the Member States of the European Union developed their own models of social justice in private law. Each model is inherently linked to national culture and tradition. However, all models have a common thread, which is the use of the law by the (social welfare) state as a means to protect the weaker party against the stronger party. Since the adoption of the Single European Act in 1986, the European Union has assumed a social outlook which has gradually developed over time eventually taking shape in the Lisbon Treaty and the Charter of Fundamental Rights. Since the adoption of the SEA, more particularly the White Paper on the Completion of the Internal Market,[1] the European Union adopted a huge set of secondary law means which influence either directly (consumer, labour, anti-discrimination and business law directives) or indirectly (directives meant to liberalise markets, e.g. telecommunication, postal services, energy - electricity and gas, transport, health care) private law matters. This new regulatory private law is governed by a different philosophy, one which cannot be brought into line with the understanding of social justice as enshrined in labour or later the consumer movement and one which is challenging national models of social justice in private law. I call the EU model of justice access justice/Zugangsgerechtigkeit (justice through access, not access to justice), i.e. that it is for the European Union to grant access justice to those who are excluded from the market or to those who face difficulties in making use of the market freedoms. European private law rules have to make sure that the weaker parties have and maintain access to the market - and to the European society insofar as this exists.en
dc.description.tableofcontents1. How the Argument Goes ................................................................................................................ 1 2. The Socio-Economic and Political Background of Social Justice (in Private Law) in France, Germany and England .................................................................................................................... 3 2.1. The English Model – A Liberal and Pragmatic Design Fit for Commercial Use ................... 4 2.1.1. English Pragmatism and Two Explanatory Hypotheses ............................................... 4 2.1.2. The Gradual Intrusion of Social Justice into Labour and Consumer Law .................... 7 2.2. The French Model – A Forward Looking Political Design of a (Just) Society....................... 8 2.2.1. The Political Conception – A Tentative Explanation.................................................... 9 2.2.2. Politicising Private Law as Social Law......................................................................... 9 3.3. The German Model – An Authoritarian Paternalistic-Ideological though Market Orientated Design .................................................................................................................................. 11 3.3.1. Ideological Paternalism and Market Pragmatism........................................................ 11 3.3.2. Authoritarian Liberalism and the Rise of Labour Law and Consumer Law ............... 12 4. The European Integration Process and the European Model of Justice........................................ 13 4.1. The Evolving Character of the European Legal Order and the Rise of ‘The Social’............ 14 4.2. The Impact of the European Integration Process on Labour and Anti-Discrimination Law. 15 4.2.1. Labour Law and Anti-Discrimination Law ................................................................. 15 4.2.2. Consumer Law ............................................................................................................ 19 5. The European Model on Access Justice ....................................................................................... 21 5.1. Social Distribute, Access Justice and Allocative Libertarian Justice.................................... 21 5.2. The Two Constitute Elements: Access Rights and Anti-Discrimination Rights................... 23 5.2.1. Specific Access Rights in Labour, Anti-Discrimination and Consumer Law............. 24 5.2.2. The Horizontal Dimension of Anti-Discrimination .................................................... 26 Bibliography......................................................................................................................................... 28en
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.language.isoenen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesEUI LAWen
dc.relation.ispartofseries2011/02en
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subjectSocial justiceen
dc.subjectwelfare stateen
dc.subjectprivate lawen
dc.subjectEuropean integrationen
dc.subjectinternal marketen
dc.subjectZugangsgerechtigkeiten
dc.subjectaccess justiceen
dc.titleSocial Justice and Access Justice in Private Lawen
dc.typeWorking Paperen
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