INTERNATIONAL AND EUROPEAN UNION LAW
Oral exam aimed at verifying the student’s knowledge. For students who have attended at least 75% of the lessons, an intermediate test may be organized on a part of the course program.
This course aims at providing students with a basic knowledge of Public International Law and European Union law, fundamental for the purpose of understanding the dynamics taking place in the International Community and to be able to study, even independently, additional specific areas of International Law (such as International Human Rights Law or International Humanitarian Law) and EU Law.
The course will deal, in particular, with the following topics:
- Introduction: History of International Law and framework of the functions of creation, ascertainment and enforcement of International rules;
- Actors;
- The Sources of International Law;
- International Responsibility: the Constitutive Elements of an International Wrong and the related Consequences;
- The Settlement of International Disputes (Diplomacy; Arbitration; the International Court of Justice);
- The UN Collective Security System;
- Origins and evolution of the European integration process;
- The Institutional Framework of the European Union;
- EU Competences;
- The Sources of EU Law (Treaties and other Sources; Secondary Law).
For the part of the course relating to International Law:
F. M. PALOMBINO, Introduzione al diritto internazionale, Laterza, Roma-Bari, 2019 (except the fifth chapter) supplemented by A. GIOIA, Diritto internazionale, Giuffrè Francis Lefebvre, Milano, latest edition (only chapter XXVII).
For the part of the course relating to EU Law, one of the following texts:
- U. VILLANI, Istituzioni di diritto dell’Unione europea, Cacucci, Bari, latest edition (chapters I; II, except paragraphs 4 and 6; III, paragraphs 1-8; V, paragraphs 1-14; VII).
- U. DRAETTA, A. SANTINI, F. BESTAGNO, Elementi di Diritto dell’Unione europea. Parte istituzionale. Ordinamento e struttura dell’Unione Europea, Giuffré, Milano, ultima ed. (chapters I; II, paragraphs 10-16; III, paragraphs 21-26; V).
These texts must be complemented with the consultation of the main sources of International Law (the Vienna Convention on the law of treaties; the draft articles on the responsibility of the state for internationally wrongful acts; the United Nations Charter; the Statute of the International Court of Justice - available online at www.un.org) and European Union Law (in particular, the Consolidated versions of the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union - available at www.europa.eu).
The course will be mainly carried out through lectures and exercises on practical cases.
For information on the contents of the program or for any clarifications, you can contact the teacher via e-mail (gasta@uniss.it).