LL.B Global law, Tilburg University (Year 2) Spring Semester 2026
European Union Law – study document (bundles 1-6)
Bundle 1 – European Integration: Drivers and Phases
The nature of the European Union
The EU as an international organization – and beyond
o At its core, the EU is an international organization (IO), because:
It is created by treaties between states → TEU + TFEU
It operates under public international law
o MS are the “Masters of the Treaties”
o This is confirmed by art 1 TEU, which states that the EU is founded on treaties
concluded by MS
Why the EU is NOT a typical IO
o The EU goes much further than classical IOs (key distinguishing features):
Direct effect on individuals
EU law creates rights and obligations for individuals
Enforceable in national courts
Autonomous legal order
EU law is independent from national legal systems
Institutional structure
Independent institutions (Commission, Parliament, CJEU)
Democratic dimensions
Individuals are directly represented (European Parliament)
o Core case law
Van Gend en Loos (Case 26/62)
Principle: direct effect + autonomous legal order
EU law is not just an agreement between states; it creates rights
for individuals enforceable in national courts
Internationale Handelsgesellschaft (Case 11/70)
Principle: supremacy + fundamental rights
EU law prevails even over national constitutional law
BUT must respect fundamental rights as general principles
Sources of EU law
Primary law (highest level)
o Main sources;
TEU (Treaty on European Union) → constitutional framework
TFEU (Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union) →
detailed rules
Charter of Fundamental Rights (CFR)
Protocols
o Confirmed by:
Art 1 TEU
Art 6(1) TEU (Charter = same legal value as Treaties)
Structure and function
o TEU → “constitutional layer”
Values (art 2)
, European Union Law – Midterm Master Study Document
LL.B Global law, Tilburg University (Year 2) Spring Semester 2026
Objectives (art 3)
Democratic principles (art 10)
Withdrawal (art 50)
o TFEU → “operational layer”
Internal market (art 26)
Policies (competition, environment, etc)
Competences
o Always distinguish: TEU (principles) v TFEU (implementation)
CFR
o Legal status
Binding since Lisbon Treaty (2009)
Same legal value as Treaties → art 6(1) TEU
o Scope
Art 51 CFR
The Charter applies:
ALWAYS to EU institutions
To Member States (MS) ONLY when implementing EU law
o Key articles
Art 47 → right to effective judicial protection
Art 52 → limitations (proportionality test)
Art 52(3) → EU rights corresponding to ECHR rights must
have same meaning; BUT EU can provide higher protection
Art 53 → minimum protection (ECHR = minimum standard (floor))
Fundamental rights in EU law
Development through case law (before the Charter)
o Originally: NO bill of rights in the Treaties
Bill of rights = fundamental document that guarantees essential rights
and freedoms to individuals
o Early position: Stork (1959) → no protection via national constitutions
Shift in approach
o Stauder (1969) → first recognition of fundamental rights
o Internationale Handelsgesellschaft (1970) → rights = general principles of EU
law
o Nold (1974)
Sources:
Constitutional traditions of MS
International treaties (esp. ECHR)
Role of the ECHR
o Important distinction
ECHR ≠ EU law
But influences EU law via art 6(3) TEU
o Fundamental rights:
Are general principles of EU law
Inspired by ECHR
, European Union Law – Midterm Master Study Document
LL.B Global law, Tilburg University (Year 2) Spring Semester 2026
Relationship: EU law v ECHR
If both are raised:
o Step 1: is EU law applicable?
If yes → CFR applies (art 51 CFR)
o Step 2: role of ECHR
Not binding as EU law
BUT:
Source of general principles (art 6(3) TEU)
Minimum standard (art 53 CFR)
o The Charter applies because the MS is implementing EU law (art 51 CFR).
The ECHR is not directly binding within EU law but informs the interpretation
of fundamental rights as general principles (art 6(3) TEU). Under art 52(3)
CFR, the level of protection cannot fall below that guaranteed by the ECHR,
although the EU may provide higher protection.
European integration
Historical drivers
o Prevent war after WWII
o Promote peace (art 3(1) TEU)
Key stages
o 1951: ECSC (European Coal and Steel Community) → control of war sources
(coal & steel)
o 1957: EEC (Treaty of Rome) → creation of common market
The four freedoms
o From art 26 TFEU:
Goods
Persons
Services
Capital
Neofunctionalism (theory)
o Integration spreads automatically:
o Economic integration → need for:
Social rules
Migration rules
Environmental policy
o This is also called the “spillover effect” (legal or economic outcomes spread to
related areas)
Enlargement and values
Accession – art 49 TEU
o Conditions:
Must be a European State
Must respect art 2 TEU values
Art 2 TEU – core values
o Human dignity
, European Union Law – Midterm Master Study Document
LL.B Global law, Tilburg University (Year 2) Spring Semester 2026
o Democracy
o Rule of law
o Human rights
o These are constitutional foundations of the EU
Enforcement – art 7 TEU
o Two stages:
(Clear) Risk of breach (art 7(1) TEU)
Serious and persistent breach (art 7(2) TEU)
o Sanction: suspension of voting rights (state is still member of the EU when it
comes to obligations (e.g., follow European rules), but certain rights are
suspended)
Withdrawal from the EU
Art 50 TEU
o Key elements/steps:
State decides (sovereignty) → art 50(1)
Notification to European Council of its intention to leave → art 50(2)
Negotiation of withdrawal agreement
Exit:
When agreement enters into for, OR
After 2 years
Nature of art 50
o Lex specialis (overrides international law)
Role of international law (VCLT (Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties))
o Important provisions:
Art 54 VCLT → withdrawal by agreement
Art 56 VCLT → no withdrawal unless implied
Art 68 VCLT → revocation allowed
Key case: withdrawal revocation
o Wightman (C-621/18)
Issue: Can a MS revoke art 50 notification?
Ruling: YES – unilateral revocation allowed
Conditions:
o Unequivocal (leaving no doubt, unambiguous)
o Unconditional
o Written
o Before withdrawal takes effect
Court’s reasoning
Sovereignty → if a state can leave, it can also change its mind
Purpose of art 50 → orderly withdrawal, NOT forced exit
International law → art 68 VCLT allows revocation
EU values → democracy + voluntary membership
“a MS cannot be forced to withdraw against its will”
Legitimacy of the EU