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Law stories

Bruno de Witte and the ever-evolving field of EU law

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  • UM news

Professor Bruno de Witte is saying goodbye to Maastricht University, but not to European Law.

Bruno de Witte

Are human rights of future generations our concern?

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  • Researchers

After years of meaningful work at our university, Prof.

fons coomans

A window of opportunity for grant recipients Nasrat and Arif

Both work on their projects at Maastricht University’s Faculty of Law on a Hestia Grant.

law_nasrat_sayed_and_arif_aksu Hestia Grant

Partial independence doesn’t exist: how will the EU get on with Poland?

The European rule of law is under siege in Poland.

Law jaarverslag Polen and EU flag

What is the right attitude for an ethical lawyer?

She was a criminal lawyer for many years and a member of the Dutch Senate for the GroenLinks (green left) party.

Law_britta_bohler story

Law stories in UMagazine

Terms and conditions of our future

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The Facebook Papers, a series of documents leaked by whistleblower Frances Haugen, brim with revelations.

facebook papers

Courtly with a strong constitution

After 35 years at Maastricht University, Constitutional Law Professor Aalt-Willem Heringa will hold his farewell lecture on 25 March.

Aalt Willem Heringa

“I want to make crossing borders easier”

  • Corporate
  • Featured
  • Human interest
  • Researchers

Hildegard Schneider is set to say goodbye.

hildegard schneider

Vulnerable victims can use all the support they can get

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  • Human interest
  • Researchers
  • Students

Sexual harassment in public is becoming a punishable offence.

Suzan van der Aa

Lessons from a border region

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  • Human interest
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The pandemic has called into question the idea of a Europe without frontiers.

Unfried Schoenmaekers

Law blogs

Trading Softly? The EU’s Quiet Shift Toward Clean Trade and Investment Partnerships

  • Law

For decades, multilateralism has been the guiding principle for regulating international trade relations between states. The European Union (EU) has long championed this approach, firmly believing that global cooperation - ideally through consensus among all countries - is the most effective way to govern state trade relations. As a fallback, the EU has also supported plurilateralism, where a critical mass of countries agrees on rules even if not everyone is on board.

Berlaymont gebouw Europese Commissie

Object- and Problem-Based Learning (OBL & PBL): A Fruitful Amalgamation for the Development of Legal Education

  • Law

Patrons at the Arthur W. Diamond Law Library at Columbia University (USA) can encounter a duplicate of an automobile wheel that relates to the 1916 court case heard by Judge Benjamin Cardozo in MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. The wheel is an object that hangs on a wall on the fourth floor of the library. Instructors could take the wheel to the classroom when dissecting that landmark case and when dealing with the core problem around the case: product liability. The use of the wheel helps to materialise the elements that are addressed in the court reporter, in the casebook, and in the daily-life situation that motivated the decision. Similar educational experiences can take place when students are welcomed at a rare book room and encounter for the first time a medieval copy of the Corpus Iuris Civilis. Some experiences are indeed indelible and help visualise what dozens of prescribed readings and explanations by an instructor cannot make easily evident and memorable.

Book at the Hugo and the Law book exhibition

Solo l’Italia? Gabry Ponte’s Eurovision song underlines striking limitations to Italy’s effective control over its cultural heritage imagery

  • Law

The staging of San Marino representative’s performance during Eurovision might be in violation of Italian cultural heritage law – yet, the principle of territoriality prevents Italy from taking effective legal action.

statue italy

From Mayors to Sheriffs: How the Netherlands is Fighting Organised Crime (and Germany is Taking Notes)

  • Law

The administrative approach to organised crime has redefined local governance in the Netherlands, where mayors wield powerful tools to disrupt illicit networks. As Germany begins to experiment with similar strategies, comparative insights become essential.

organised crime blog

Rules Under Fire: The Case for International Trade Law Today

  • Law

On 17 April, many of us had the pleasure of attending an IGIR Expert Lecture by John Clarke, former Chief Agriculture Negotiator of the European Union and former Head of the EU Delegation to the World Trade Organization and the United Nations in Geneva. He is currently a fellow at the Maastricht University Institute for Globalisation and International Regulation (IGIR). During his talk, John offered valuable insights into the escalating trade war sparked by the sweeping tariffs recently introduced by US President Donald Trump.

trade
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