Law and orders: the orders of the European Court of Justice as a window in the judicial process and institutional transformations

In a new co-authored article in European Law Open, Daniel Naurin investigates how in a quest for efficiency and uniformity, the CJEU delegates judicial tasks to administrative support units. By examining all published orders of the CJEU, the authors argue that this practice blurs the lines between administration and judicial decision-making. 

Image may contain: Rectangle, Font, Parallel.Orders are judicial decisions designed to shore up fair and timely resolution of disputes. As written, detailed, and factual documents, they are reliable markers of procedural steps and a unique source of information about the inner working of an institution. This article examines all published orders of the European Court of Justice, drawing lessons from their use. The analysis demonstrates that the pursuit of efficiency and uniform application blurs the lines between the administration and judging. First, it centralises the institution, expanding the duties of the Registry and amplifying the role of the Cabinet of the President of the Court. Second, it bureaucratises the interpretation and the uniform application of European Union law. These processes are common in judicial institutions with no power over their dockets. But the particular European response, authored by the Court, also suggests its reluctance to forfeit the interpretive monopoly.

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Urška Šadl, Lucía López Zurita, Stein Arne Brekke, and Daniel Naurin. 
Law and orders: the orders of the European Court of Justice as a window in the judicial process and institutional transformations

European Law Open, 2022, 1(3), pp. 549-575.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/elo.2022.32

Published Nov. 7, 2022 11:11 AM - Last modified Nov. 7, 2022 11:14 AM