The European Criminal Law Review (EuCLR) is a journal dedicated to the development of European Criminal Law and the cooperation in criminal matters within the European Union. In these areas the Lisbon Treaty has supposedly brought about the most important changes and also the greatest challenges for the future.It is the journal’s ambition to provide a primary forum for comprehensive discussion and critical analysis of all questions arising in relation to European Criminal Law. It will include articles and relevant material on topics such as- the harmonisation of national criminal law in consideration of European legal instruments,- the implementation of the principle of mutual recognition in the area of cooperation in criminal matters and the development towards the creation of a European Public Prosecutor,- the emergence of a balanced European Criminal Policy based on fundamental rights, freedom and democracy with particular reference to the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights.
The article discusses whether criminal sanctions are the more effective tool to deal with breaches of national substantive immigration rules regulating the conditions of entry and stay of third-country nationals and to achieve the objectives of the...
The European Union aims to develop a well-balanced, mature European criminal law, where free movement of persons as well as free movementof judgments is being pursued in order to install a European Area of Freedom, Security and Justice, and to...
This article aims to analyse the recent developments with regard to the collection for criminal justice purposes of electronic evidence, and more precisely, content data, in Europe. Firstly, a brief historical overview of the EU’s action in the...
In today’s digital age, a large part of our lives has shifted from the physical to the virtual world. As this holds true for ordinary citizens and criminals alike, in the context of criminal investigations, many pieces of evidence nowadays concern...
The purpose of this paper is to encourage a reflection on the use of anonymous witness evidence by the European Court of Human Rights. An analysis of the leading cases solved by the Strasbourg judges will provide an overview of the European case law...