Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up Cases

(Series Information) European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, 2020 5(2), 931-961 | Article | (Table of Contents) I. Introduction. - II. Mapping judicial cooperation: the unchartered waters of follow-up judgments. - II.1. The criteria for assessing judicial cooperation in follow-up judgmen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lorenzo Squintani, Sjoerd Kalisvaart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Papers (www.europeanpapers.eu) 2020-12-01
Series:European Papers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.europeanpapers.eu/en/e-journal/environmental-democracy-judicial-cooperation-courts-behaviour-follow-up-cases
id doaj-19178d0402104c099dfbb29fc4225742
record_format Article
spelling doaj-19178d0402104c099dfbb29fc42257422021-01-03T17:53:11ZengEuropean Papers (www.europeanpapers.eu)European Papers2499-82492020-12-012020 5293196110.15166/2499-8249/415Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up CasesLorenzo Squintani0Sjoerd Kalisvaart1University of GroningenUniversity of Groningen(Series Information) European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, 2020 5(2), 931-961 | Article | (Table of Contents) I. Introduction. - II. Mapping judicial cooperation: the unchartered waters of follow-up judgments. - II.1. The criteria for assessing judicial cooperation in follow-up judgments. - II.2. Known categories of judicial cooperation and uncooperation. - II.3. Chartering new waters: Italy and Belgium. - III. Italian and Belgian judges as European judges in the context of preliminary references in environmental matters. - III.1. Preliminary references in environmental matters in Italy and Belgium. - III.2. Full cooperation. - III.3. Presumed cooperation. - III.4. Fragmented cooperation. - III.5. Interrupted cooperation. - III.6. Presumed cooperation. - III.7. Suspended cooperation. - IV. Synthesis and comparison. - V. Initiation reflection for a preliminary research agenda. - VI. Conclusions. | (Abstract) Judicial cooperation in environmental matters is a key aspect of the move towards environmental democracy undertaken by the European Union. This Article presents the preliminary findings about the kind of behaviour that national courts can show with their judgments once they received a preliminary ruling from the Court of Justice of the European Union, so-called follow-up judgments. It first shows the results of the latest two empirical studies, namely that Italian and Belgian courts tend to cooperate fully with the Court of Justice in environmental matters. Besides, only one new category of judicial cooperation is highlighted, that of suspended cooperation. The unfolding of the categories of judicial cooperation seems to have reached the saturation point. Accordingly, this Article presents the first quantitative and qualitative findings that emerge when looking at judicial cooperation in follow-up judgments from five jurisdiction: next to Belgium and Italy, also UK, Sweden, and the Netherlands. This comparison suggests that country-by-country, theme-by-theme and case-by-case circumstances influence national courts behaviour, potentially affecting the level of environmental democracy enjoyed in certain Member States. Accordingly, this Article introduces an empirical research agenda to investigate factors and reasons explaining the findings, therefore contributing to the improvement of judicial cooperation in environmental matters.https://www.europeanpapers.eu/en/e-journal/environmental-democracy-judicial-cooperation-courts-behaviour-follow-up-casesenvironmental democracyjudicial protectionpreliminary rulingjudicial subsidiarityfollow-up judgmentsnational courts behaviour
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lorenzo Squintani
Sjoerd Kalisvaart
spellingShingle Lorenzo Squintani
Sjoerd Kalisvaart
Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up Cases
European Papers
environmental democracy
judicial protection
preliminary ruling
judicial subsidiarity
follow-up judgments
national courts behaviour
author_facet Lorenzo Squintani
Sjoerd Kalisvaart
author_sort Lorenzo Squintani
title Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up Cases
title_short Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up Cases
title_full Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up Cases
title_fullStr Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up Cases
title_full_unstemmed Environmental Democracy and Judicial Cooperation in Environmental Matters: Mapping National Courts Behaviour in Follow-up Cases
title_sort environmental democracy and judicial cooperation in environmental matters: mapping national courts behaviour in follow-up cases
publisher European Papers (www.europeanpapers.eu)
series European Papers
issn 2499-8249
publishDate 2020-12-01
description (Series Information) European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, 2020 5(2), 931-961 | Article | (Table of Contents) I. Introduction. - II. Mapping judicial cooperation: the unchartered waters of follow-up judgments. - II.1. The criteria for assessing judicial cooperation in follow-up judgments. - II.2. Known categories of judicial cooperation and uncooperation. - II.3. Chartering new waters: Italy and Belgium. - III. Italian and Belgian judges as European judges in the context of preliminary references in environmental matters. - III.1. Preliminary references in environmental matters in Italy and Belgium. - III.2. Full cooperation. - III.3. Presumed cooperation. - III.4. Fragmented cooperation. - III.5. Interrupted cooperation. - III.6. Presumed cooperation. - III.7. Suspended cooperation. - IV. Synthesis and comparison. - V. Initiation reflection for a preliminary research agenda. - VI. Conclusions. | (Abstract) Judicial cooperation in environmental matters is a key aspect of the move towards environmental democracy undertaken by the European Union. This Article presents the preliminary findings about the kind of behaviour that national courts can show with their judgments once they received a preliminary ruling from the Court of Justice of the European Union, so-called follow-up judgments. It first shows the results of the latest two empirical studies, namely that Italian and Belgian courts tend to cooperate fully with the Court of Justice in environmental matters. Besides, only one new category of judicial cooperation is highlighted, that of suspended cooperation. The unfolding of the categories of judicial cooperation seems to have reached the saturation point. Accordingly, this Article presents the first quantitative and qualitative findings that emerge when looking at judicial cooperation in follow-up judgments from five jurisdiction: next to Belgium and Italy, also UK, Sweden, and the Netherlands. This comparison suggests that country-by-country, theme-by-theme and case-by-case circumstances influence national courts behaviour, potentially affecting the level of environmental democracy enjoyed in certain Member States. Accordingly, this Article introduces an empirical research agenda to investigate factors and reasons explaining the findings, therefore contributing to the improvement of judicial cooperation in environmental matters.
topic environmental democracy
judicial protection
preliminary ruling
judicial subsidiarity
follow-up judgments
national courts behaviour
url https://www.europeanpapers.eu/en/e-journal/environmental-democracy-judicial-cooperation-courts-behaviour-follow-up-cases
work_keys_str_mv AT lorenzosquintani environmentaldemocracyandjudicialcooperationinenvironmentalmattersmappingnationalcourtsbehaviourinfollowupcases
AT sjoerdkalisvaart environmentaldemocracyandjudicialcooperationinenvironmentalmattersmappingnationalcourtsbehaviourinfollowupcases
_version_ 1724350306796437504