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 * Welcome
   * About FIDE
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TOPICS

Topic 1: National Courts and the Enforcement of EU Law – the pivotal role of
national courts in the EU legal order

Download the report (PDF)

2021 update - topic 1 (PDF)

Download the questionnaire

 

General rapporteur: Michael Dougan, Liverpool University; Anna Wallerman
Ghavanini, University of Gothenburg (acting general rapporteur)
Institutional rapporteur: Michal Bobek, (formerly) Court of Justice of the
European Union
Editors: Jurian Langer (Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs and University of
Groningen) & Marleen Botman (Pels Rijcken & Droogleever Fortuijn)

In 1963, participants of the FIDE Congress in The Hague discussed the question
whether “the Ignorance of Community Rules Directly Applicable to Undertakings”
would create a right to civil damages. The European Court of Justice in
Francovic provided an answer in the affirmative, whilst leaving it to the Member
States to apply the principle of state liability subject to the requirements of
equivalence and effectiveness.

In line with Article 19(1) TEU, national courts play a pivotal role in ensuring
the enforcement and effectiveness of EU law. They ensure that effective judicial
protection is guaranteed as warranted by Article 47 of the Charter of
Fundamental Rights. Their independence and well-functioning is key to mutual
trust that underlies the cooperation in justice and home affairs.

This topic invites national rapporteurs to critically reflect on the role their
national judiciary plays in the enforcement of EU law, including from a
procedural point of view.

Among the questions to be discussed:

 * Do Courts raise EU law out of their own motion?
 * What is the intensity of judicial review?
 * How do Courts apply the preliminary ruling procedure and the CIFLIT-doctrine?
 * Is there a distinction in the way in which EU law is applied depending on
   jurisdiction (criminal, civil, administrative) or level of the judiciary
   (lower and higher Courts, Supreme and or Constitutional Courts)?
 * How do Courts apply the obligation to recognise and enforce decisions of the
   counterparts in other Member States?
 * What is the significance of national judgments on EU law for the EU legal
   order?




Topic 2: Data Protection – setting global standards for the right to personal
data protection

Download the report (PDF)

2021 update - topic 2 (PDF)

2021 update institutional and general rapporteur - topic 2 (PDF)

Download the questionnaire

 

General rapporteur: Orla Lynskey, London School of Economics
Institutional rapporteurs: Herke Kranenborg, European Commission & Anna Buchta,
European Data Protection Supervisor
Editor: Jorrit Rijpma (Leiden Law School)

In the midst of what has already been called the Fourth Industrial Revolution,
the protection of personal data has taken on a renewed importance. One only
needs to think of the public outcry in the wake of the Facebook/Cambrigde
Analytica scandal to see the salience of this topic. With the entry into force
in spring 2018 of a fully revised, comprehensive regime for data protection,
aiming at a high level of data protection, the EU is setting the scene globally.
Article 8 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights is unique amongst international
human rights instruments in containing a right to the protection of personal
data. The General Data Protection Regulation (Regulation 2016/679, GDPR) aims to
strengthen this right. It adopts a risk based approach when assessing data
protection operations and puts compliance at the centre of an organisation’s
governance. It applies both to private parties and public bodies. It is
accompanied by Directive 2016/680, which regulates to the processing of personal
data in the field of police- and judicial authorities. A new Regulation on
e-Privacy is still to be adopted.

FIDE 2020 will be an excellent opportunity for a first evaluation of the new
data protection regime. As the new rules leave quite some room for Member State
legislation, it will look examine the way in which the new regime has been
integrated in the national legal orders and how potential conflicts of laws have
been dealt with. It will also take stock of the application and interpretation
by the European Court of Justice, national courts and the significantly
reinforced national data protection authorities (DPAs). Finally, it will allow
for an assessment of the institutional novelty of the European Data Protection
Board, which will bring together national DPAs and may take decisions binding on
the national authorities. The new EU data protection regime is a topic of great
relevance for both academia and practice. It lends itself perfectly well for
comparisons with other areas of EU law and raises a set of broader questions of
EU law, amongst others in relation to the protection of fundamental rights, the
enforcement of EU law, the safeguarding of Member States’ national interests and
the external dimension of EU law.

Among the subjects to be discussed:

 * The relation with other fundamental rights, such as freedom of expression.
 * The effective enforcement of the GDPR on a national- and on a European level,
   including representative and competing regulatory approaches.
 * The application of existing and new data subject rights, including the
   prohibition on automated decision making and the right to data portability.
 * The interaction with other domains of law, such as intellectual property law,
   competition law and consumer law, (national) administrative law.
 * How to balance personal data protection with digital innovation?
 * The transfer of personal data to third countries.




Topic 3: EU Competition Law and the Digital Economy – protecting free and fair
competition in an age of technological (r)evolution)

Download the report (PDF)

2021 update - topic 3 (PDF)

2021 update general rapporteur - topic 3 (PDF)

2021 update institutional rapporteur - topic 3 (PDF)

Download the questionnaire

 

General rapporteurs: Nicolas Petit & Pieter Van Cleynenbreugel, Université de
Liège
Institutional rapporteur: Thomas Kramler, European Commission
Editor: Daniel Mandrescu (Leiden Law School)

The digital economy is a hot topic for competition authorities these days and
likely to remain so in the near future. In the digital economy, digitalization
has brought profound changes to many industries. Fundamentally new business
models have emerged: search engines, price comparison websites, social (media)
networks. Many business models of the sharing economy would not be feasible
without digitalization. We also see that digital business models often operate
as platforms or networks. Data volumes handled via these platforms are
constantly increasing and the possibility to collect and analyze user data
therefore plays a much more significant role in these markets than in
traditional markets. These changes and the emergence of these platforms and
networks creates challenges for competition and for competition authorities.

This topic focuses on the question whether EU competition law and the relevant
national rules are fit for this digital future. This topic invites national
rapporteurs to critically reflect on the question whether the digital economy
requires special treatment by competition lawmakers and regulators.

Among the questions to be discussed:

 * What are the challenges for competition law enforcement due to the rising use
   of search and pricing algorithms in the digital economy?
 * Competition authorities are now focusing on a narrower set of concerns
   arising from digitalization – especially the collection and use of data on a
   massive scale by data-related businesses. What are the challenges for
   competition law enforcement in this regard?
 * Is there need to focus (also) on the broader set of social and economic
   issues arising from the digitalization? If so, is competition law and its
   instruments well equipped to deal with these issues?
 * Many digital markets show high levels of concentration and are dominated by a
   few big players. If the competition law instruments are used more
   pro-actively to rein in the market power of the platforms and networks,
   precisely what power should be reined in?
 * Is there a need to rethink the balance between ex ante regulation and ex post
   interventions by authorities in the digital economy?






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