Journals for Your Master Thesis Series – #8 European Law and Legal Issues

We are delighted to present the eighth part of the Journals for Your Master Thesis Series – ‘European Law and Legal Issues’ – intended for those whose Master Theses deal, to a greater or lesser extent, with legal issues within the European Union.



On trends and developments in European law, legal issues relating to the European Union, case law of the ECJ, national courts, the WTO, and the ECtHR (Wolters Kluwer).

Analysis and further development of European law, in particular the law of the European Union. Its scope of topics includes, in particular, fundamental issues of European integration, the economic law of the internal market, the protection of fundamental rights in Europe, and issues relating to individual European policies (Nomos/Inlibra).

Follows developments in European Union law through interviews, studies and columns that analyse the key legislation adopted by the European Union institutions, the case law of the Court of Justice and the General Court, and their implications at national level (LexisNexis).

Contains articles on European constitutional law, its history, and its evolution, also through doctrines, theories, and practices, plus case notes (Cambridge University Press).

Includes regular symposia on important issues in the field, a forum for a US-European dialogue, an ongoing series analysing the contribution of major historical figures within the European tradition of international law (Oxford).

On European integration through law in a multidisciplinary context – political, economic, historical, philosophical, social, and cultural (Wiley).

Publishes articles, case notes, legal debates, legal developments, and commentaries by leading academics and professionals in the areas of European and Comparative Law, and covers areas of interest in both European Law and in the comparative laws of European states (Sage).

Provides insights into current European affairs, European law, as well as European policies and economic issues. It features regular columns on competition law and the European budget (Dalloz).

Publishes in-depth articles, commentaries on judgments of European and national courts by senior officials of the European Commission with a high level of expertise and by European academics of recognised standing (Larcier).

Covers both the institutional aspects of European Union law and its substantive aspects, such as freedoms of movement, competition, taxation, social law, the environment, judicial cooperation, and fundamental rights (Dalloz).

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