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		Pris: 1495 SEK exkl. moms     |   The intersection between law and economics is a dynamic field of research. Yet, European law has so far not been the subject of comprehensive, systematic economic analysis. Instead issues such as the European debt crisis, COVID-19 pandemic, and the climate emergency have largely escaped scholarly analysis through the nexus of EU law and economics. 
 
EU Law and Economics closes this gap, providing an overview of the application of economics to the institutional, procedural, and substantive aspects of European law. Drawing on various branches of the economic sciences - including rational choice and game theory, and institutional and behavioural economics - this book goes beyond conventional methods of EU legal scholarship to expand our understanding of EU law and its effects. This book devotes attention to EU Treaties and secondary law, as well as their adjudicative interpretation, while using economic theory to explain their core legal principles such as conferral, subsidiarity, and mutual recognition. 
 
Systematic and original, this book offers additional descriptive and normative metrics that expand our understanding of the decision-making behaviour of EU institutions and member states, while opening a new dialogue between two distinct disciplines. 
 
Table of Contents 
 
Part I. Basics 
1:Meandering between rational choice, realism, constructivism, and institutionalism 
2:A cursory review of economic methods 
 
Part II. Why Cooperate Through EU Law 
3:What states and EU institutions care about 
4:The logic of barter trade: Rational choice and constitutional economics 
5: Reducing transaction costs 
6: Supplying public goods and addressing external effects 
7:Leveraging economies of scale 
8:Why cooperation fails 
 
Part III. How to Cooperate Under EU Law 
9:Membership of EU Treaties 
10:Centralization 
11:Flexibility 
12:Non-consensual EU law 
13:Legislative choices 
14:Enforcement 
 
Part IV. Who Cooperates under EU Law 
15:The European Council and Council of Ministers 
16:The European Parliament 
17:The European Court of Justice 
18:The European Central Bank 
19:The European Commission 
20:Adjudication 
 
Part V. What to Cooperate on in the EU 
21:European Public Goods 
22:Internal market: economic integration 
23:Economic and Monetary Union |  |   |   
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