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The European Court of Justice 'Open Skies' judgments of 5 November 2002: A European contribution to the multilateral framework for international aviation relations

Posted on:2005-12-06Degree:LL.MType:Thesis
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Deleau, DelphineFull Text:PDF
GTID:2456390008982733Subject:Political science
Abstract/Summary:
The 'Open Skies' policy launched by the United States in 1992 gave birth to new bilateral agreements between them and most Member States of the European Union, as the latter were adopting a single aviation market. Nevertheless, the nationality clause the agreements included conflicted with the Community principle of freedom of establishment.; On November 5, 2002, the European Court of Justice therefore ruled there was indeed violation. However, the true question raised by the agreements focused less on such violation, which was anterior to those agreements, than on their fragmentation and the inequality they created in the Europe/United States aviation relations.; Indeed, the issue to be stressed in the judgments is linked to the building of the external competence of the Union with regards to aviation. While the Court refused to grant total competence to the Community, it made that of the Member States impracticable, leading to a global mandate for the Commission.; Although the orientations of the agreements to be concluded are foreseeable, the role the European Union will play in a potential multilateral negotiation remains to be defined.
Keywords/Search Tags:European, Aviation, Agreements, Court, States
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