Primary sources of European Union law consist of the founding (or constitutive) treaties, the treaties between Member States, and the treaties between the EU and third parties. Other sources of law are secondary legislation (regulations, directives, decisions) and opinions of the Court of Justice.
Founding Treaties
The founding treaties are:
Treaty Establishing the European Coal and Steel Community (1951)
Treaty Establishing European Economic Community (1957)
Treaty Establishing the European Atomic Energy Community (1957)
Treaty on European Union (1992)
The full texts of these treaties are available on EUR-LEX and in the following sources:
Encyclopedia of European Union Law. Constitutional Texts. (formerly Encyclopedia of European Community Law). KJE 926. E53x.
European Union Law Reporter (formerly Common Market Law Reporter). KJE 949.E96.
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Other EU Treaties
The EU enters into numerous other treaties in addition to the founding treaties. These other treaties can be found in the databases listed above, as well as in the EUR-LEX database.
The three types of secondary legislation:
Regulations are adopted by the Council of the European Union upon a proposal from the Commission. Regulations have general effect and are directly applicable in all of the Member States.
Directives are adopted by the Council of the European Union upon a proposal from the Commission. Directives are addressed to the Member States and are binding - Member States may choose the form and methods of implementation. The process of implementation is called harmonization.
Decisions are issued by the Council or Commission and are binding on the governments, companies, or individuals addressed.
Finding Secondary Legislation
Secondary legislation is published in the daily Official Journal (OJ), the official gazette of the European Union. The online version of the OJ is available 1952 - date on EUR-LEX. It is also available on Lexis Advance > International > European Union > European Union Legislation and Regulations.
It is available in print the Law Library:
The OJ is divided into the following series and parts.
Citations to the Secondary Legislation
You must know what type of legal act you have since directives, commission decisions and recommendations can have the same numerical citation. For example, 93/13 (EC) could be a directive or a decision.
Official Journal: |
1993 OJ L 95/29 |
1993 = Year |
Regulations: |
(EC) 2913/92 |
EC = Community initials |
Other legal acts: |
93/13 (EC) |
93 = year |
Documents published in the L series of the OJ from 1 January 2015 will be numbered by the Publications
Office of the European Union in the following standardised way:
(domain) YYYY/N
The domain — (EU), (Euratom), (EU, Euratom), (CFSP) — is placed at the beginning of the number in brackets. YYYY represents the year of publication and always comprises four digits. N represents the sequential number of the document for a given year, regardless of the domain and the type of document, and is composed of as many digits as necessary.
Other Legislative Documents
Debates of the European Parliament.
European Parliament, Working Documents. Older documents in Microfiche KJE 910.3. E97x.
EUROPARL Homepage.
Commission of the European Communities, Documents. Also known as COM documents. Proposals and amendments issued by Commission, including explanatory memorandum. Numbered sequentially each year and referred by number and date. Citation format: COM (90) 322 final. 1985-2002 Microfiche KJE 5380. A5 C66x. Index to COM Documents (hardcopy) Micro Room KJE 5380. A4 I53x.
See also Official Documents of the EU; you can see documents organized by the institution that issued them.
Reference to many of these documents can be found in the OJ C series, The Bulletin of the European Union, and other sources.
How to Find Case Law
Reports of Cases before the Court of Justice and the Court of First Instance (also called European Court Reports (ECR)) is the official case reporter. KJE 924.5. R472. Delays of two to three years in publication are common. These cases are also available on the Court's website, which also provides a Digest of Case Law that lists cases in a subject classification. The EUR-LEX website also provides access to cases and permits full text key word searches.
Selected cases are also found in the European Union Law Reporter (CCH) (formerly Common Market Reporter). KJE949.E96. Cases can be found by under "Finding Lists" tab.
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