Legal Standing in Collective Redress Actions for Breach of EU Rights: Facilitating or Frustrating Common Standards and Access to Justice?

2021 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 14-22
Author(s):  
Astrid Stadler

The article provides a brief overview of the background of the new European Union directive on representative actions for protection of the collective interest of consumers (Directive 2020/1828). It describes the basic elements of the directive and explains the major changes that have occurred since the European Commission issued its Recommendation document on collective redress in 2013. The author highlights the issues of the scope of application of the directive, of legal standing to bring a representative action, of collective settlements, and of the problem of funding for collective actions. This discussion puts emphasis on the need to extend legal standing to individual members of the group and articulates an appeal to national legislatures, particularly in Germany, to be more open-minded towards commercial litigation funding and the establishment of a public access-to-justice fund designed to guarantee the effectiveness of Directive 2020/1828 and its implementation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Molavi

At a time when the collective redress landscape is undergoing a period of transformative change, this important and timely research focuses on class actions in England and Wales. Aiming to promote access to justice, this pioneering work separates fact from fiction in an easily digestible way, offering progressive solutions for reform.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-182
Author(s):  
Simone Benvenuti

Judicial networking is an ever-expanding phenomenon in European governance. This paper focuses on the role judicial networks may have in shaping environmental legal policies and in the implementation of European environmental legislation. In particular, it looks at the debates happening between three main networks of judges with regard to the issue of the legal standing of associations, which is a heated topic that has also a political relevance. The author suggests that the building of a European judicial community within a broader European legal field is currently in progress, where national judges have an important role to play.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-117
Author(s):  
Massaro Piletta

After years of compensatory collective redress being left to a sort of regulatory competition among Member States, Directive 1828/2020 finally introduced an EU wide representative action scheme, aimed at strengthening the position of European consumers vis-à-vis new market dynamics such as globalisation and digitalisation. The new system, which shall run in parallel with national tools, introduces some innovations such as a cross-border action mechanism, the possibility of adopting an opt-out model and a specific regulation of third-party litigation funding in the context of collective redress. This aspect, addressed already in the 2013 Recommendation, is of particular interest, because third party funding represents a particularly powerful complement to collective redress in easing citizens' access to justice. However, the provisions introduced with Directive 1828/2020 leave some issues open. In particular, the Court's role in managing the funding agreement, with special reference to the funder's fee, and the effect of the funding agreement in case an opt-out adhesion mechanism is adopted are of paramount importance and still need to be addressed interpretatively. In this task, the comparative method will be particularly helpful in analysing the solution which Countries more familiar with third party funding, like Australia, Canada or the United States have introduced or discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 109
Author(s):  
Mustakim Mustakim ◽  
Sania Salamah

The fact that the legal aid provision has not reached all the Indonesian citizens forces the Ministry of Law and Human right to establish the ministerial regulation of the Ministry of Law and Human Right No. 1 year 2018 about Paralegal on legal aid provision which is effectively applied on the 26th January 2018 as the implementation of Act No. 16 year 2011 about Legal Aid. The regulation that gives the Paralegals a spacious room to lawyer in the court resulted in pros and cons if it is contrasted to the position of an advocate within the act No. 18 year 2003 about lawyer, legal aid quality, and monitoring on the provision of legal aid. The statement of the problem is how the legal standing of Paralegal in lawyering in the court as what has already been regulated by the regulation of the Ministry of Law and Human Right No. 1 year 2018. This is a normative research with legislation approach and concept approach. The result of this research found out that there are Paralegal regulations that need to be adjusted with the regulation about legal aid provision such as age limit, qualifi ed educational curriculum, and the need of ethical code that ties up the Paralegal joining law aid organization, so the objective of this constitutional nation to admit, to protect, and to guarantee the human right of the citizens about the access to justice and equality before the law as what has been explained in Article 28 D, article 4 point (1) Constitution of Indonesian Republic Year 1945 could be implemented.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 235
Author(s):  
Ridwan Ridwan

Every citizen of Indonesia, of course longing for a fast, simple and low cost judicial process. This may be done everyone has an access to justice without any exception. These conditions have been realized by the Constitutional Court decision that had to cancel Article 31 of Law Number 18 Year 2003 on Advocates, because the article is considered contrary to the Constitution of 1945 and has no binding legal force. However, the implementation of the Constitutional Court ruling will not necessarily be implemented, because in practice there are still debates among law enforcer (police, prosecutors, judges, lawyers) even academics about the legal standing of the law lecturer who perform service in the form of assistance to disadvantaged communities who are dealing with legal issues. This condition is caused by a lack of positive response to the Constitutional Court, and the lack of response is due to the lack of legal resources by extracting the part of law enforcement and academics for a growing source of law. Kata Kunci: Decision, Constitutional Court, law enforcer, academics, citizen , Justice.


De Jure ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Regina Stoilova ◽  

The article discusses recent court practice denying access to justice on clean air matters. Based on analysis of national and EU law, the article argues that air quality plans shall be considered measures of general nature and the population exposed to excessive air pollution shall be granted legal standing to challenge them before courts.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 11-32
Author(s):  
Silvia Pais

It will be argued in this article that the EU Recommendation on common principles for collective redress might have limited impact on the field of competition law due to: several uncertainties regarding the legal standing in class actions; difficulties in their funding; and the risk of forum shopping with cross-border actions. Nevertheless, Belgium and Great Britain have recently introduced class actions into their national legal systems and addressed some of the difficulties which other Member States were experiencing already. It will also be suggested that the Portuguese model – the ‘Popular Action’ – and recent Portuguese practice may be considered an interesting example to follow in order to overcome some of the identified obstacles to private antitrust enforcement.


Author(s):  
Michael Molavi

AbstractIn the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, states around the world have experienced sustained growth in the emerging industry of litigation finance in light of the perceived insularity of courtrooms from the instabilities and fluctuations of financial markets. In Canada, this nascent industry has been dominated by class actions given the high costs, risk exposures, and attractive rewards associated with collective redress. Such investments have been legitimated as promoting access to justice, a fundamental human right. This paper traces the historical and contemporary development of this legal dynamic of financialization by documenting the progressive liberalization of maintenance and champerty laws from the nineteenth century to the current period through a series of case studies, before exploring the legal economics of the emerging industry in Canada. In so doing, this paper critically examines the impacts of law’s financialization on multilayer access to justice.


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