Institutional Frameworks of Community Health and Safety Regulations
Committees, Agencies & Private Bodies
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:1st Oct '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
In this book, Dr Ellen Vos analyses the emergence of EC product safety regulation, which is explained as a reaction both to spill-over effects of the internal market policy, and to growing societal concerns regarding health and safety protection. Due to factors such as mutual distrust between the Member States, the 'post-Maastricht' Community is increasingly required to play a direct role in health and safety regulation. This has confronted the Community with regulatory problems relating to the assessment and management of risks. This book seeks to identify the principles of the resulting Community approach to risk regulation. It first elaborates the fundamental EU law concepts of competence, institutional balance, subsidiarity, delegation of powers in relation to health and safety. These legal concepts are then used to appraise the legality and the legitimacy of the three basic regulatory patterns typical of the Community approach to science-based decision-making: resorting to committees (in the food sector), to agencies (pharmaceuticals), and to private bodies (standardisation). Dr Vos concludes that, to date, Community risk regulation is pragmatic but lacks a coherent regulatory model. However, events following the BSE crisis suggest the Community may be taking the first tentative steps toward developing a general concept of risk regulation.
...tracks in meticulous detail the development of the Community's involvement in health and safety regulation...Anyone seeking to understand the complex and obscure legal issues surrounding the BSE crisis will find Chapter 3 illuminating...There is much material in this book which will be relatively unfamiliar to UK environmental lawyers and which is not readily accessible elsewhere. Stephen Tromans Journal of Environmental Law September 2002
ISBN: 9781901362749
Dimensions: 234mm x 156mm x 32mm
Weight: unknown
408 pages