Public economic law, economic regulations, legal framework, economic policies, government intervention, economic governance
Explore the foundational sources and principles of public economic law, shaping economic policies and regulations.
[...] This complementarity ensures a double protection. Promotion of public law sources of business within the hierarchy of internal norms - Constitutionalization of certain principles, integration of DPA principles integrated into the Constitution, movement of delegation of the power of decision of the administration A. The contribution of constitutional sources - Few provisions to regulate markets = sign of a liberal regime - General rules = rules of the DDHC/special rules = preamble of 46 - DDHC : article 2 = right of property like inalienable right of Man and the 17 = takes a nuance car allows theexpropriation - Preamble of 46 : defend democracy and liberties individuals against a economic disposition (Then the question of the conditioning of this sector is raised) - PPNT : principle of participation (all workers participate in the determination of their working conditions and in the management of the company through the representation of delegates) - Constitution of 1958 : 34C provides the scope of application of the law on economic lawCESE) B. [...]
[...] The supplementary contribution of the ECHR law and international law - Supplementary Impact of the ECHR Law - Protocol No. [...]
[...] LF, LFR) - Ordinances : acts of economic law, ordinance of 1he December 1986 : freedom of prices and competition - Regulations : governmental, ministerial, certain AAI ARCOM) - Soft Law Acts - Circular - Contract - AAU/AAI II- Internationalisation of public sources of business law A. Fundamental impact of DUE: - Violation sanctioned by the national judge - Code of Public Procurement which is the result of the transposition of an European directive - 345 TFEU: principle of neutrality for the Commission which must not prejudge the property regime of Member States; public enterprises must intervene on the market by adopting the same behavior as private individuals. [...]
[...] If today we speak of public business law we have not, however, reduced its field of application. The public economic law is understood as the set of rules that govern the intervention of the State and other public persons in the economy and make it possible to guarantee the economic and fundamental freedoms of each individual (For example, freedom to start a business or free circulation). To what extent does the completeness of the different legal norms allow for the guarantee of legal security and the preservation of fundamental freedoms in public economic law? [...]
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