Author:
Derlén Mattias,Lindholm Johan
Abstract
AbstractThe case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) is one of the most important sources of European Union law. However, case law's role in EU law is not uniform. By empirically studying how the Court uses its own case law as a source of law, we explore the correlation between, on the one hand, the characteristics of a CJEU case—type of action, actors involved, and area of law—and, on the other hand, the judgment's “embeddedness” in previous case law and value as a precedent in subsequent cases. Using this approach, we test, confirm, and debunk existing scholarship concerning the role of CJEU case law as a source of EU law. We offer the following conclusions: that CJEU case law cannot be treated as a single entity; that only a limited number of factors reliably affect a judgment's persuasive or precedential power; that the Court's use of its own case law as a source of law is particularly limited in successful infringement proceedings; that case law is particularly important in preliminary references—especially those concerning fundamental freedoms and competition law; and that initiating Member State and the number of observations affects the behavior of the Court.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference108 articles.
1. They have a mean PageRank of .000195.
2. See infra Figure 4.
3. To further complicate things, new citations change the content and structure of the law. See also infra note 36 and accompanying text.
4. See infra Table 1.
5. Barceló, supra note 3.
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17 articles.
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