Year
2017
Authors
Abstract
The application of law, in the variety of global legal situations, has its own dynamism. It cannot result from the mere application of a method or a legal solution at a given moment, in a predetermined space and on a predetermined level, by a duly identified actor. It must be grasped in one movement. In a single situation, several laws must sometimes be mobilised, alternatively, cumulatively, at the same time or at different moments, in one or several spaces or on one or several levels, by one or by multiple actors. This distinctive dynamic, which the lawyer must be conscious of when passing from one context – national, international or European – to another, has an influence over the law, its uses and, sometimes, its content. The reasoning is organised according to a three-step approach: comparison, combination and hierarchization of the methods and solutions of national, international and European law that the lawyer must use to resolve the case.
BERGÉ, J.S. et HELLERINGER, G. (2017). Operating Law in a Global Context: Comparing, Combining and Priotising. Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 235 pages.