University of Liege | Version française
Study programmes 2008-2009Last update : 29/06/2009
DROI8011-1  European substantive law
Duration :  45h Th
Credits/ECTS :  
Bachelor in law, 3rd yearDeuxième quadrimestre4
Holder(s) :  Anne‑Lise Sibony
Language :  Langue française
Course contents :  The aim of this course is to give a general introduction to internal market law and to European citizenship. The four basic freedoms (free movement of goods, persons, capital and services) will be studied. Note however that free movement of capital will only be dealt with briefly. Time permitting, a short introduction to European competition rules will be offered and the emergence of European private law will be evoked.
The methods which characterise European legislation on one hand and the and case-law of the European Court of Justice on the other will be emphasised throughout the course.
Course objective :  The objective of this course is to complement student's basic knowledge of European law. In the European institutional law course, students will have learned how EU's institution function and produce law. After taking this course, students should have a good basic knowledge of what the European Union has achieved. They should also be familiar with the various sources of European law possess the know-how to apply substantive internal market rules in simple factual situations. This is why the course also aims at developing analytic capabilities of students. At the end of the course, they should be able to identify whether or not a factual situation is governed by European law. They should be able to solve simple problems involving one or several of the four freedoms. Students should be able to develop by themselves the types of legal reasoning most common in European law. This capacity will be acquired through methodical reading and discussion of Court rulings gathered in the course documentation package. Students will have, a few times in the semester an opportunity to work on a case study in small groups with a tutor.
Prerequisites :  Institutional European Law
Workshops :  See section on organisation of the course.
Organization :  This course is offered in the second term. Students are expected to take an active part in the course. They should have read the cases assigned for the class and be able to answer questions on them. Questions from students on assigned readings will be most welcome. A few classes will be replaced by exercise sessions (case studies) in small groups. Assignments will be made available in advance. It will be compulsory for students to have prepared the assigned exercise before class.
Written notes :  There is no syllabus for this course. Students will receive a course outline and a bibliography at the beginning of the course. A documentation package containing cases and legislation studied in the course will be made available. This course has a dedicated space on WebCT (e-mearning tool) where, inter alia, slides used for the lecture are available.
Assessment :  The exam for this course is written both in the first and second exam session. It consists of three parts: limited precise questions, broader essay questions and case studies.
Students may bring with them the European treaties as well as the documentation package for the exam. Authorised documents must not be annotated. Students may highlight and/or flag certain sections in authorised documents.
Contacts :  Anne-Lise Sibony alsibony@ulg.ac.be

Assistant : Alexandre Defossez adefossez@ulg.ac.be


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