Syllabus
Registration via LPIS
Day | Date | Time | Room |
---|---|---|---|
Thursday | 11/23/17 | 04:00 PM - 07:00 PM | D3.0.218 |
Tuesday | 11/28/17 | 04:00 PM - 07:00 PM | D2.0.030 |
Thursday | 11/30/17 | 04:00 PM - 07:00 PM | TC.4.13 |
Tuesday | 12/05/17 | 06:00 PM - 08:00 PM | D2.0.342 Teacher Training Raum |
Thursday | 12/07/17 | 04:00 PM - 07:00 PM | EA.5.030 |
Tuesday | 12/12/17 | 04:00 PM - 07:00 PM | D2.0.030 |
Thursday | 12/14/17 | 04:00 PM - 07:00 PM | TC.5.16 |
Tuesday | 12/19/17 | 06:00 PM - 08:00 PM | D2.0.030 |
This course is aimed at both regular WU students (Bachelor Program in Business, Economics and Social Sciences) as well as incoming international students. It provides advanced knowledge of some of the core areas of European economic law, including the fundamental freedoms (free movement of goods, services, persons and capital), the constitutional foundations of Economic and Monetary Union, the rules on competition within the internal market (as regards anti-competitive agreements, monopoly and oligopoly, mergers and acquisitions, and State aid) as well as EU external economic relations (WTO, CETA, TTIP, etc).
PLEASE NOTE: While it is, in principle, possible to attend this course on its own, it builds on and further develops some of the topics discussed in "European Law and Economics", held by Dr. Katrin Forgó (#0507 and #1540, respectively). For regular WU students, both courses, taken together, form the elective module "European Economic Law" (Wahlfach "Europäisches Wirtschaftsrecht"). As these courses take place consecutively, it is possible to attend both of them in the same term.
Course participants gain a deeper understanding of EU law in general (including EU external economic relations and basics of WTO law), and of the legal framework for cross-border business activities within the internal market in particular, as would be necessary to autonomously identify and appropriately deal with typical problems arising in that context.
Student performance will be assessed on the basis of active in class participation (20%) a written exam (30%) and a final reflection paper (50%).
Unit | Date | Contents |
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1 | The EU's internal market: introduction and basic concepts; free movement of goods | |
2 | Free movement of goods (continued) | |
3 | Free movement of workers, freedom of establishment and to provide services, free movement of capital and payments | |
4 | Economic and Monetary Union; midterm exam | |
5 | EU competition law |
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6 | EU competition law (continued) |
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7 | EU external economic relations; basics of WTO law |
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8 | EU free trade agreements of a new Generation: CETA, TTIP |
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