EU Counter-Terrorist Policies and Fundamental Rights: The Case of Individual Sanctions

Sanctions against private individuals have been widely used in the fight against terrorism, but not without significant controversy. This book examines the complex institutional and substantive issues arising from the European Union's practice of listing and sanctioning private individuals suspected of supporting terrorism. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the issues raised by individual sanctions adopted to give legal effect to United Nations lists and those drawn up by the EU itself.

The book demonstrates that individual sanctions endanger the protection of fundamental rights and the functioning of the European legal order. While the ECJ has in principle confirmed that all Community sanctions are subject to full judicial review irrespective of whether they give effect to UN lists or EU lists, in practice individuals do not have the necessary procedural rights at their disposal. Additionally, protection from listings of individuals as terrorist suspects in the second and third pillar remains very limited. This raises the possibility that national constitutional courts could challenge the supremacy of European law in reaction to this disregard of fundamental rights and foundational principles.

The book provides a comprehensive analysis of these complex legal issues, and situates them in their international context. The basis of the book is a critical review of the case-law of the CFI and the ECJ on individual sanctions. Conclusions are drawn how the EU Courts should provide fundamental rights protection and suggestions are made how the adoption procedure of individual sanctions could comply with general principles of EU law.

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EU Counter-Terrorist Policies and Fundamental Rights: The Case of Individual Sanctions

Sanctions against private individuals have been widely used in the fight against terrorism, but not without significant controversy. This book examines the complex institutional and substantive issues arising from the European Union's practice of listing and sanctioning private individuals suspected of supporting terrorism. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the issues raised by individual sanctions adopted to give legal effect to United Nations lists and those drawn up by the EU itself.

The book demonstrates that individual sanctions endanger the protection of fundamental rights and the functioning of the European legal order. While the ECJ has in principle confirmed that all Community sanctions are subject to full judicial review irrespective of whether they give effect to UN lists or EU lists, in practice individuals do not have the necessary procedural rights at their disposal. Additionally, protection from listings of individuals as terrorist suspects in the second and third pillar remains very limited. This raises the possibility that national constitutional courts could challenge the supremacy of European law in reaction to this disregard of fundamental rights and foundational principles.

The book provides a comprehensive analysis of these complex legal issues, and situates them in their international context. The basis of the book is a critical review of the case-law of the CFI and the ECJ on individual sanctions. Conclusions are drawn how the EU Courts should provide fundamental rights protection and suggestions are made how the adoption procedure of individual sanctions could comply with general principles of EU law.

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EU Counter-Terrorist Policies and Fundamental Rights: The Case of Individual Sanctions

EU Counter-Terrorist Policies and Fundamental Rights: The Case of Individual Sanctions

by Christina Eckes
EU Counter-Terrorist Policies and Fundamental Rights: The Case of Individual Sanctions

EU Counter-Terrorist Policies and Fundamental Rights: The Case of Individual Sanctions

by Christina Eckes

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Overview

Sanctions against private individuals have been widely used in the fight against terrorism, but not without significant controversy. This book examines the complex institutional and substantive issues arising from the European Union's practice of listing and sanctioning private individuals suspected of supporting terrorism. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the issues raised by individual sanctions adopted to give legal effect to United Nations lists and those drawn up by the EU itself.

The book demonstrates that individual sanctions endanger the protection of fundamental rights and the functioning of the European legal order. While the ECJ has in principle confirmed that all Community sanctions are subject to full judicial review irrespective of whether they give effect to UN lists or EU lists, in practice individuals do not have the necessary procedural rights at their disposal. Additionally, protection from listings of individuals as terrorist suspects in the second and third pillar remains very limited. This raises the possibility that national constitutional courts could challenge the supremacy of European law in reaction to this disregard of fundamental rights and foundational principles.

The book provides a comprehensive analysis of these complex legal issues, and situates them in their international context. The basis of the book is a critical review of the case-law of the CFI and the ECJ on individual sanctions. Conclusions are drawn how the EU Courts should provide fundamental rights protection and suggestions are made how the adoption procedure of individual sanctions could comply with general principles of EU law.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199573769
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Publication date: 02/22/2010
Series: Oxford Studies in European Law Series
Pages: 330
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Dr. Christina Eckes is a post doctoral researcher at the University of Amsterdam. Prior to this, she worked as lecturer at the University of Surrey (2007-2008), Guildford, where she co-founded the Surrey European Law Unit (SELU). After having completed her studies at the University of Trier and Lausanne with the First State Examination in Law (Germany), she did a master's degree (LLM) in European Community Law at the College of Europe in Bruges. She defended her PhD thesis on European sanctions against private individuals at King's College London in February 2008 and remains a Visiting Fellow at the Center of European Law at King's College. She has published several articles in the fields of European Union and European Human Rights Law. Her particular research interests include the external relations of the European Union, access to justice, constitutional implications of multilevel regulation and counter-terrorism sanctions against individuals.

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