• ORGANIZING COMMITTEE THE STATE ORDER AND THE LAW OF THE INTEGRATING EUROPE

M Heribert, Franz Koeck-Universität, Johannes Linz, Bogusław Banaszak, Schambeck-Universität Herbert, Kepler Johannes, Linz, H C Rainer, Bianca, Elena-Luminiţa, Andreea, Herbert Schambeck
unpublished
European diversity is justified on a manifold basis, namely in geographical factors, cultural life, social systems, economic systems and political factors that are constitutionalised and legalised by the law. The legal unity of Europe was, for a long time, based on Roman and Canon law. They both formed the so-called common law, the ius commune. It was applied in all countries of Central and Eastern Europe. There was a single European jurisprudence, in which the language was Latin, that
more » ... d from all disciplines. As for the constitutions of European states, they have come into effect at different times due to different traditions. Reference to the systems and the development of these constitutional systems of European states is not only important for the systems themselves and their people, but also for the EU. Integrated Europe has chosen a path to reach a new form of cooperation by using the Community law instead of the earlier start of working next to, and unfortunately often against, each other. EU law encompasses characteristics of a constitution in the formal and material sense, but the EU does not construe a state but rather a federation of states sui generis. in various formats concerning governments and state organisations.
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