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Introduction to European Institutional Law

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Introduction to European Institutional Law
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Introduction to European Institutional Law ;)

Na podstawie programme 2013.
Materiały → dr Izabela Skomerska-Muchowska, notatki z zacnych wykładów jejmości i inne niezbędności.
Ania, Asia, Artur ;) Special thanks to Maciek!

1. Evolution of European integration and legal character of the European Union
a. Political foundations of European Communities
9th of May 1950 – Schuman's Plan (Schuman – French foreign minister)
 "Europe will not be made all at once, or according to a single plan. It will be built through concrete achievements which first create a de facto solidarity."
 create a new form of organisation of states in Europe called a supranational community.
 The plan/declaration provided joining, binding France and western Germany economically by binding coal and steel industries (so that the war would be impossible from the economical and financial point of view), the declaration was also made to improve the life status, common market  It led to the re-organization of post- World War western Europe by treaty. The proposal led first to the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC). It was also the forerunner of several other European Communities and also what is now the European Union (EU).
18th of April 1951 - Treaty establishing the European Coal and Steel Community (Paris Treaty) – signed by 6 countries
 an international organization serving to unify European countries after the Second World War. It was formally established by the Treaty of Paris (1951), which was signed by Belgium, France,
West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. The ECSC was the first international organization to be based on the principles of supranationalism and would ultimately lead the way to the founding of the European Union
 institutional structure of ECSC: High Authority; Council of Ministers; Parliamentary Assembly;
Court of Justice
1954 – European Defence Community ; European Political Community
1957- Rome Treaty: The Treaty of

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