2023-2024 / DROI2055-2

Advanced EU Law

Duration

24h Th

Number of credits

 Master in law (120 ECTS)5 crédits 
 Extra courses intended for exchange students (Erasmus, ...) (Faculty of Law, Political Science and Criminology)5 crédits 

Lecturer

Pieter Van Cleynenbreugel

Language(s) of instruction

English language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the first semester, review in January

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

This course will offer a panoramic perspective of the state of European Union law today. As the EU intervenes in ever more domains, we have to make a selection in doing so. Given their increasing importance, we made the choice in that respect to approach the European Union and its law from the particular point of view of 'fundamental rights'.

The importance of fundamental rights can no longer be denied at the European Union level. Having gained gradual recognition up to a point where an EU Charter of Fundamental Rights has been adopted, fundamental rights have come to play a major role in the design, interpretation and application of European Union law. This course uses the presence, possibilities and limits fundamental rights offer as an inroad into studying European Union law in a somewhat more advanced manner.

The course will comprise a general introduction on the role and status of fundamental rights in the European Union (sessions 1 and 2), before questioning whether a specific hierarchy exists between different types of fundamental rights as recognised throughout the European Union (sessions 3, 4 and 5). The final part of the course zooms in on specific fundamental rights that can be considered typical of the EU: the right to transparency and openness (sessions 6 and 7) and the right to the protection of one's personal data (sessions 8, 9 and 10).

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

By the end of this course, students will have gained a deeper understanding of specific themes in which EU law has played a role or in which it can be invoked.

Students will have a better command of legal English. They will be able to understand the English version of a European Court case or a European legislative instruments. They will be capable of explaining points of law by writing different assignments in English within the subject matter of this course.


Students will capable of developing arguments based on a problem of EU law and will be able to reflect more critically on the state and future of EU law.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

Basic knowledge of EU institutional and substantive law. Ability and willingness to follow a lecture in English and to submit written assignments in English.

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

10 two-hour lectures will be organised, which will take place during our regular time-slot on Thursdays from 14h00 to 16h00 in the Marx classroom, B31.

The syllabus for this course will be available in both printed and electronic version. More information will be posted on eCampus.

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Face-to-face course


Additional information:

Ex cathedra class sessions.


In addition, students will be required to prepare two written case notes. They will receive individual written feedback on their first case note in the second half of November.

Recommended or required readings

Cases and materials as well as course outlines will be available in a printed reader, as well as online via eCampus.
The cases and materials largely contain Court of Justice case law and EU legislation. Links to doctrinal articles will be posted on eCampus.

Written work / report

Continuous assessment


Additional information:

The course is the subject of two evaluation mechanisms.

Firstly, each student will have to prepare two written assignments in the format of case notes. Those case notes will count for 12 out of 20 points of the final grade (4 points for the first case note, 8 for the second). An individual feedback moment will be organised, allowing students to improve their writing skills throughout the semester.

Secondly, a written essay will have to be submitted at the end of the course. The subject and practical arrangements for this essay will be communicated during the course. The final essay counts for 8 points out of 20.

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

10 lecture sessions (in the Marx classroom, B31) will be organised on Thursdays from 14h to 16h:.

The course will start on 28 September - no class on 21 September yet

- The emergence of fundamental rights in the European Union (28/09)

- Fundamental rights in the European Union and beyond: the relationship between EU fundamental rights and other fundamental rights regimes (5/10)

- Fundamental rights in the EU internal market (I): free movement rights as/and fundamental rights (12/10)

- Fundamental rights in the EU internal market (II): citizenship rights as fundamental rights? (19/10)

- Fundamental rights in the EU internal market (III): fundamental rights applying horizontally? (26/10)


Submission of first written assignment (Friday 27/10, 16h00 via eCampus and on paper at secretariat)

No class on 2 November

- EU-specific fundamental rights: openness and transparency (I) (9/11)

- EU-specific fundamental rights: openness and transparency (II) (16/11)

No class on 23 November - written feedback on your case note

- EU-specific fundamental rights: data protection (I) (30/11)

- EU-specific fundamental rights: data protection (II) (7/12)

- EU-specific fundamental rights: data protection (III) = Q&A (14/12)


Submission of second written assignment (15/12, 16h00 via eCampus and on paper at secretariat)

Submission of your final exam essay (22/12, 16h00, via eCampus only)

Contacts

Professor: Pieter Van Cleynenbreugel (pieter.vancleynenbreugel@ulg.ac.be)
Secretariat: Caroline Langevin (caroline.langevin@ulg.ac.be)

Association of one or more MOOCs