Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech Republic

Although the acquis communautaire relating to gender equality has largely been transposed in the Czech Republic, this does not necessarily mean that these rules are being fully implemented. Almost two years after accession to the EU, the equally important implementation phases – namely, application...

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Main Author: Barbara Havelkova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law 2006-12-01
Series:Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/21
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spelling doaj-9afa57c759784fb9b7cfafe509b0cbaa2020-11-25T03:06:50ZengUniversity of Zagreb, Faculty of LawCroatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy1845-56621848-99582006-12-01229931010.3935/cyelp.02.2006.21Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech RepublicBarbara Havelkova0Europa-Institut of Saarland University & Charles University PragueAlthough the acquis communautaire relating to gender equality has largely been transposed in the Czech Republic, this does not necessarily mean that these rules are being fully implemented. Almost two years after accession to the EU, the equally important implementation phases – namely, application (establishment of procedures and administration of measures by the relevant authorities) and enforcement (monitoring by the relevant authorities and ensuring or compelling conformity) – are severely underdeveloped, and compliance by the private sector is at a low level. Little attention is paid to continuous policy evaluation, i.e. checking whether the adopted methods of application and enforcement are bringing about the desired results, or subsequent policy reform, i.e. learning from lessons drawn from the evaluation stage. In this paper, the individual stages of implementation will be looked at in order to determine possible challenges to the effectiveness of equality law at the national level. Effectiveness here is understood, following Snyder, as the fact that “law matters: it has effects on political, economic and social life outside the law – that is, apart from simply the elaboration of legal doctrine”.https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/21acquis communautairegender equalityczech republiceu accessionimplementation phasespolicy reformeffectiveness of law
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Barbara Havelkova
spellingShingle Barbara Havelkova
Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech Republic
Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
acquis communautaire
gender equality
czech republic
eu accession
implementation phases
policy reform
effectiveness of law
author_facet Barbara Havelkova
author_sort Barbara Havelkova
title Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech Republic
title_short Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech Republic
title_full Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech Republic
title_fullStr Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech Republic
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness of Transposed EU Equality Law in the Czech Republic
title_sort effectiveness of transposed eu equality law in the czech republic
publisher University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law
series Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
issn 1845-5662
1848-9958
publishDate 2006-12-01
description Although the acquis communautaire relating to gender equality has largely been transposed in the Czech Republic, this does not necessarily mean that these rules are being fully implemented. Almost two years after accession to the EU, the equally important implementation phases – namely, application (establishment of procedures and administration of measures by the relevant authorities) and enforcement (monitoring by the relevant authorities and ensuring or compelling conformity) – are severely underdeveloped, and compliance by the private sector is at a low level. Little attention is paid to continuous policy evaluation, i.e. checking whether the adopted methods of application and enforcement are bringing about the desired results, or subsequent policy reform, i.e. learning from lessons drawn from the evaluation stage. In this paper, the individual stages of implementation will be looked at in order to determine possible challenges to the effectiveness of equality law at the national level. Effectiveness here is understood, following Snyder, as the fact that “law matters: it has effects on political, economic and social life outside the law – that is, apart from simply the elaboration of legal doctrine”.
topic acquis communautaire
gender equality
czech republic
eu accession
implementation phases
policy reform
effectiveness of law
url https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/21
work_keys_str_mv AT barbarahavelkova effectivenessoftransposedeuequalitylawintheczechrepublic
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