07261nam 22007091c 450 991097206320332120200115203623.0978147420215214742021529781782250449178225044110.5040/9781474202152(CKB)2670000000359665(EBL)1186562(OCoLC)843642787(SSID)ssj0000972354(PQKBManifestationID)11492374(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000972354(PQKBWorkID)10948220(PQKB)11666086(MiAaPQ)EBC1773014(MiAaPQ)EBC1186562(Au-PeEL)EBL1773014(CaPaEBR)ebr10720228(CaONFJC)MIL498982(OCoLC)893332456(OCoLC)851160688(UtOrBLW)bpp09258059(Au-PeEL)EBL1186562(UtOrBLW)BP9781474202152BC(EXLCZ)99267000000035966520150227d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrToward a Prosecutor for the European Union Volume 1 A comparative analysis edited by Katalin Ligeti1st ed.Oxford Hart Publishing 2013.1 online resource (1097 p.)Modern studies in European law v. 34Description based upon print version of record.9781849463140 184946314X Includes bibliographical referencesI. Introduction -- Katalin Ligeti -- Part I Presentation of national systems of investigation, prosecution, evidence and procedural safeguards -- 1. The Austrian system Robert Kert -- Andrea Lehner -- 2. The Belgian system Marie-Aude Beernaert -- 3. The Danish system Birgit Feldtmann -- Sebastian Knop -- 4. The Dutch system Idlir Peçi -- 5. The English and Welsh system Tricia Howse -- 6. The Estonian system Jaan Ginter -- 7. The Finnish system Teemu Kastula -- 8. The French system Aurélie Binet-Grosclaude -- 9. The German system Bernd Hecker -- 10. The Hungarian system Miklos Hollán -- 11. The Irish system Andrea Ryan -- 12. The Italian system Francesca Ruggieri -- Stefano Marcolini -- 13. The Latvian system Kristine Strada-Rozenberga -- 14. The Lithuanian system -- Remigijus Merkevièius Gintaras Švedas -- 15. The Luxembourgish system Marc Schiltz -- 16. The Maltese system Stefano Filletti -- 17. The Polish system Celina Nowak -- S³awomir Steinborn -- 18. The Portuguese system Pedro Caeiro -- Miguel João Costa -- 19. The Romanian system Claudiu Dumitrescu -- Augustin Lazãr -- Anca Augusta Lazãr -- Angela Nicolae -- 20. The Scottish system Lorna Harris -- 21. The Slovak system Anna Ondrejová -- 22. The Slovenian system Primož Gorkiè -- 23. The Spanish system Lorena Bachmaier -- 24. The Swedish system Christoffer Wong -- Part II Issues of interest for the creation of a European Public Prosecutor´s Office -- i. Federal Criminal Law and the European Public Prosecutor's Office Marta Muñoz de Morales -- Adán Nieto Martín -- Marianne Wade -- ii. The system of vertical cooperation in administrative investigations in EU subsidy cases Justyna £acny -- Lech Paprzycki -- Eleonora Zieliñska -- iii. The system of vertical and horizontal cooperation in administrative investigations in EU competition cases Martin Böse -- iv. The material scope of the European Public Prosecutor's Office Rosaria Sicurella -- v. The interaction between the ECJ and the ECTHR with respect to the protection of procedural safeguards: the accession of the EU to the ECHR. Silvia Allegrezza -- vi. Judicial control in cooperation in criminal matters. The evolution from judicial cooperation to mutual recognition Anne Weyembergh, Zlata Durdevic -- vii. Report on the protection of personal data in the framework of police and judicial cooperation in criminal matters.Stefan Braum -- Valentina Covolo -- viii. Mutual Recognition in the European Law of Civil Procedure Burkhard Hess -- ix. Decentralised enforcement of European Competition Law: powers, procedures and legal protection -- Heleen Koggink -- Saskia Lavrijssen -- Thomas Nauta"Volume 1 begins with thorough descriptions of 24 different national legal systems of investigation and prosecution, addressing a range of evidential and procedural safeguards. These will serve as a point of reference for all future research on public prosecutors. Volume 1 also contains a series of cross-cutting studies of the key issues which will inform debates about the creation of a European Public Prosecutor's Office, including studies of vertical cooperation in administrative investigations in subsidy and competition cases, the accession of the EU to the ECHR, judicial control in cooperation in criminal matters, mutual recognition, and decentralised enforcement of European competition law."--PublisherIn an era in which the EU's influence in criminal law matters has expanded rapidly, attention has recently turned to the possible creation of a European Public Prosecutor's Office. This two volume work presents the results of a study carried out by a group of European criminal law experts in 2010-2012, with the financial support of the EU Commission, whose aims were to examine in detail current public prosecution systems in the Member States and to scrutinise proposals for a new European office. Volume 1 begins with thorough descriptions of 20 different national legal systems of investigation and prosecution, addressing a range of evidential and procedural safeguards. These will serve as a point of reference for all future research on public prosecutors. Volume 1 also contains a series of cross-cutting studies of the key issues that will inform debates about the creation of a European Public Prosecutor's Office, including studies of vertical cooperation in administrative investigations in subsidy and competition cases, the accession of the EU to the ECHR, judicial control in cooperation in criminal matters, mutual recognition and decentralised enforcement of European competition law. Volume 2 (which will be published in 2013) presents a draft set of model rules for the procedure of the European Public Prosecutor's Office and continues with a set of comparative studies of the national legal systems that cover the gathering of evidence, seizure of assets, arrests, tracking and tracing, prosecution measures, procedural safeguards, the presumption of innocence and the right to silence, access to the file and victim reconciliation. Volume 2 concludes with the final report, written by Professor Ligeti, summarising the findings of the group and reporting on the prospects for the proposed reformModern studies in European law ;v. 34.ProsecutionEuropean Union countriesInternational criminal lawProsecution345.405Ligeti KatalinUtOrBLWUtOrBLWUkLoBPBOOK9910972063203321Toward a Prosecutor for the European Union4340286UNINA