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.
Contemporary economic criminal law reflects three fundamental dynamics that elucidate its evolution. The first concerns the privatisation of regulation and control over economic behaviour, leading to the proliferation of non-state rules of conduct...
Corruption remains a problem in many countries. As a result, national and international mechanisms have been put in place to prevent or combat it. The international measures include the adoption of United Nations Convention Against Transnational...
The article aims at providing an insight into the reforms outlined within the Italian National Recovery and Resilience Plan, with a view to showing that they differ from past legislative changes and signal an overall shift in approach (and mindset),...
The aim of this article is to propose an interpretation of sports corruption that is consistent with the already consolidated economic dimension which characterises the sports sector, an element that has been legally recognised by the European...
The European Commission considered the Directive 2008/99/EC on the protection of the environment through criminal law inadequate to address the challenges posed by the advancing climate crisis. As a result of this assessment, the European...