IMPLEMENTATION OF THE EUROPEAN ARREST WARRANT IN THE EUROPEAN UNION, THE.
This book provides a critical
analysis of the principle of mutual recognition of judicial decisions in
criminal matters in the EU, through a detailed assessment of its most prominent
instrument, the European Arrest Warrant (EAW). It conceptualises and
contextualises the lack of clear vision in the building up of the area of
freedom, security and justice from an EU constitutional law, as well as a
comparative and international criminal law standpoint.
The EAW is considered both as a test for all the other
measures which have been adopted or will be adopted as part of the mutual
recognition agenda, and as an evolution of classic extradition. On the one hand,
its significance is viewed from the perspective of both EU law and international
law, by highlighting the structural deficiencies of the former Third Pillar and
the need to remedy them. On the other hand, its impact is verified not only in
the context of European cooperation in criminal matters, but also in light of
the more general question of the identity of the EU as a polity as well as the
nature and implications of EU integration after the entry into force of the
Treaty of Lisbon.
In particular, this work revolves around four main issues:
first, the need to substantially re-define the concept of mutual recognition;
second, the extent to which the new mechanism of the EAW effectively operates
within a non-harmonised landscape; third, the exact nature and scope of mutual
trust, as a notion that underpins the principle of mutual recognition in
European criminal law; and finally, the tension between the need to enhance the
law enforcement aspects of EU cooperation and the urge to build up a common
framework of procedural rights. An overview of the implementation of the EAW in
the UK and Italy, as examples of a common law and a civil law jurisdiction, is
also offered.
The book is aimed primarily at academics from different
backgrounds both within and outside Europe. Those with an expertise in
international criminal law will gain an insight into the way consolidated
principles of cooperation in criminal matters work in the EU context. Those with
a general knowledge of EU law and/or the former Third Pillar will learn of the
implications of extending EU integration to the area of criminal law. The book
will also appeal to comparative lawyers who are not familiar with EU law.
Finally, practitioners will find it useful to relate their daily work to the
main doctrinal debates on the transnational dimension of criminal law.
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