EU social and labour rights and EU internal market law
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Other documents of the author: Dirección General de Políticas Interiores de la Unión (Parlamento Europeo); Alberti, Gabriella; Doherty, Michael; Ahlberg, Kerstin; Oliver, Liz; López López, Julia; Bruun, Niklas; Chacartegui Jávega, Consuelo; Unterschütz, Joanna; Forde, Christopher; Schiek, Dagmar
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Show full item recordcomunitat-uji-handle:10234/25884
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Title
EU social and labour rights and EU internal market lawAuthor (s)
DOI
10.2861/498Date
2016-09-22Abstract
EU Social and Labour Rights have developed incrementally, originally through a set of legislative initiatives creating selective employment rights, followed by a non-binding Charter of Social Rights. Only in 2009, ... [+]
EU Social and Labour Rights have developed incrementally, originally through a set of legislative initiatives creating selective employment rights, followed by a non-binding Charter of Social Rights. Only in 2009, social and labour rights became legally binding through the Charter of Fundamental Rights for the European Union (CFREU). By contrast, the EU Internal Market - an area without frontiers where goods, persons, services and capital can circulate freely – has been enshrined in legally enforceable Treaty provisions from 1958. These comprise the economic freedoms guaranteeing said free circulation and a system ensuring that competition is not distorted within the Internal Market (Protocol 27 to the Treaty of Lisbon). Tensions between Internal Market law and social and labour rights have been observed in analyses of EU case law and legislation. This report, provided by Policy Department A to the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs, explores responses by socio-economic and political actors at national and EU levels to such tensions. On the basis of the current Treaties and the CFREU, the constitutionally conditioned Internal Market emerges as a way to overcome the perception that social and labour rights limit Internal Market law. On this basis, alternative responses to perceived tensions are proposed, focused on posting of workers, furthering fair employment conditions through public procurement and enabling effective collective bargaining and industrial action in the Internal Market. [-]
Subject
Carta de los Derechos Fundamentales de la Unión Europea | EU Charter of Fundamental Rights | condición de trabajo | working conditions | derecho de establecimiento | right of establishment | Derecho de la competencia | Competition Law | Derecho del trabajo | Labour Law | España | Spain | Igualdad de Trato | Equal Treatment | Irlanda | Ireland | Jurisprudencia (UE) | Case Law (EU) | Libre Circulación de Trabajadores | Free Movement of Workers | Libre Prestación de Servicios | Freedom to Provide Services | Mercado único | Single Market | Movilidad de la mano de obra | Labour Mobility | Negociación Colectiva | Collective Bargaining | Polonia | Poland | Seguridad Social | Social Security | Suecia | Sweden | Tratado de Lisboa | Treaty of Lisbon
ISBN
978-92-823-7955-4Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPublisher
Publications Office of the European UnionRights
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess