How do I find EUR-Lex?
Table of Contents
How do I find EUR-Lex?
Search by document number You can find a document by typing the year, number and type. The results are limited to that document and its corrigenda, if any. Available only on the EUR-Lex home page.
How do you cite EUR-Lex documents?
The case number can be checked on any of the commercial databases or on EUR-lex, and will consist of the court prefix, a rolling number and the year. Citations should follow the format: case number | case name | [year] | report abbreviation | first page. Case T–344/99 Arne Mathisen AS v Council [2002] ECR II–2905.
Does the EU have a website?
The main European Union home page. Site is available in many languages. The European Council consists of the heads of state or government of the EU’s member states, together with its President and the European Commission President.
Where can I find EU law?
Search for recent EU case-law on the European Court of Justice website by case number, by names of the parties or by date.
What is the meaning of EUR?
Eur. abbreviation. Europe. European. Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc.
How do you reference EU directives?
For EU directives, decisions and regulations, your reference needs to include ‘Legislation name – including the type of legislation and its number’ (year) Official Journal issue, page numbers. In-text citation: This issue is covered in ‘Council directive 1999/2/EC’ (1999)….
Where is EU legislation published?
Legislation originating from the European Union These types of legislation are published by the Publications Office of the European Union on the EUR-Lex website.
What is the official EU website?
Europa
Europa is the official web portal of the European Union (EU), providing information on how the EU works, related news, events, publications and links to websites of institutions, agencies and other bodies. .
Are .EU sites reliable?
A . EU domain is known to be a highly-reliable and trustworthy domain extension. The registrants of a . EU domain are restricted to people and businesses from the European Union only and their identities have been properly verified.
Where can I read EU law cases?
Where to find EU case law
- Westlaw. The ‘European Union’ search screen provides access to case law from 1954 onwards. To search or browse case law and legislation: from the home page, select ‘More’ and then ‘European Union’.
- Lexis Library. Contains case law from 1954 onwards.
What is EU law simple?
EU law, or European Union law, is a system of law that is specific to the 28 members of the European Union. This system overrules the national law of each member country if there is a conflict between the national law and the EU law.
Who implements EU directives?
the Commission
The EU has two procedures by means of which implementing directives can be established. In both procedures the Commission initiates and ultimately decides on implementing directives. A committee of representatives of the member states can either advise on or has to approve of implementing directives.
Who makes EU directives?
It can be issued by the main EU institutions (Commission, Council, Parliament), the Committee of the Regions and the European Economic and Social Committee.
Where can I find EU documents?
www.AsktheEU.org lists all EU institutions, offices, bodies and agencies covered by the EU access to documents Regulation and permits citizens to file requests publicly via the website, to track the responses received in real-time and to classify the outcome of their request.
What is the difference between EU regulations and directives?
Regulations have binding legal force throughout every Member State and enter into force on a set date in all the Member States. Directives lay down certain results that must be achieved but each Member State is free to decide how to transpose directives into national laws.
Who owns .EU domain?
European Commission
. eu is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for the European Union (EU).
Introduced | 28 April 2005 |
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Registry | EURid |
Sponsor | European Commission |
Intended use | Entities connected with the European Union |
Actual use | Gradually increasing, mostly among sites with pan-European or cross-border intentions. (details) |