Miriam Hartlapp
Otto Suhr Institute of Political Science Freie Universität Berlin Berlin, Germany. Miriam Hartlapp is Professor of Comparative Politics: Germany and France at the Freie University Berlin (FU). Before joining the FU in April 2017, she held chairs at Leipzig (2014–2017) and at Bremen University (2013–2014), worked at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne, at the International Labour Organization in Geneva, and led a Young Independent Research Group at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center. She is coauthor of Complying with Europe: The Impact of EU Minimum Harmonisation and Soft Law in the Member States (2005, winner of the 2007 EUSA Best Book in EU Studies Prize) and Which Policy for Europe? Power and Conflict Inside the European Commission (2014). Her research focuses on governance in the EU multilevel system, particularly the European Commission and the role of France and Germany in the EU, comparative implementa- tion, (non-)compliance and enforcement, and regulation of economic, employment, and social policies. Currently, she is academic coordinator of an EU-funded interdisciplinary project on European Union soft-law research and is leading an ANR-DFG project on the effects of EU soft law across the multilevel system.Otto Suhr Institute of Political Science Freie Universität Berlin Berlin, Germany. Miriam Hartlapp is Professor of Comparative Politics: Germany and France at the Freie University Berlin (FU). Before joining the FU in April 2017, she held chairs at Leipzig (2014–2017) and at Bremen University (2013–2014), worked at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne, at the International Labour Organization in Geneva, and led a Young Independent Research Group at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center. She is coauthor of Complying with Europe: The Impact of EU Minimum Harmonisation and Soft Law in the Member States (2005, winner of the 2007 EUSA Best Book in EU Studies Prize) and Which Policy for Europe? Power and Conflict Inside the European Commission (2014). Her research focuses on governance in the EU multilevel system, particularly the European Commission and the role of France and Germany in the EU, comparative implementa- tion, (non-)compliance and enforcement, and regulation of economic, employment, and social policies. Currently, she is academic coordinator of an EU-funded interdisciplinary project on European Union soft-law research and is leading an ANR-DFG project on the effects of EU soft law across the multilevel system.

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About Miriam Hartlapp
Otto Suhr Institute of Political Science Freie Universität Berlin Berlin, Germany. Miriam Hartlapp is Professor of Comparative Politics: Germany and France at the Freie University Berlin (FU). Before joining the FU in April 2017, she held chairs at Leipzig (2014–2017) and at Bremen University (2013–2014), worked at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne, at the International Labour Organization in Geneva, and led a Young Independent Research Group at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center. She is coauthor of Complying with Europe: The Impact of EU Minimum Harmonisation and Soft Law in the Member States (2005, winner of the 2007 EUSA Best Book in EU Studies Prize) and Which Policy for Europe? Power and Conflict Inside the European Commission (2014). Her research focuses on governance in the EU multilevel system, particularly the European Commission and the role of France and Germany in the EU, comparative implementa- tion, (non-)compliance and enforcement, and regulation of economic, employment, and social policies. Currently, she is academic coordinator of an EU-funded interdisciplinary project on European Union soft-law research and is leading an ANR-DFG project on the effects of EU soft law across the multilevel system.
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Taking the EU to Court
This open access book provides an exhaustive picture of the role that annulment conflicts play in the EU multilevel system. Based on a rich dataset of annulment actions since the 1960s and a number of in-depth case studies, it explores the political dimension of annulment litigation, which has become an increasingly relevant judicial tool in the struggle over policy content and decision-making competences. The book covers the motivations of actors to turn policy conflicts into annulment actions, the emergence of multilevel actors’ litigant configurations, the impact of actors’ constellations on success in court, as well as the impact of annulment actions on the multilevel policy conflicts they originate from. Christian Adam is Assistant Professor at the Geschwister Scholl Institute for Political Science, Ludwig Maximilians Universität München, Germany. Michael W. Bauer holds the Jean Monnet Chair for Comparative Public Administration and Policy Analysis at the German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer. He is also a part-time professor at the School of Transnational Governance, European University Institute, Florence, Italy. Miriam Hartlapp is Professor of Comparative Politics: Germany and France at the Freie University Berlin, Germany. She previously held chairs at Leipzig (2014–17) and Bremen University (2013–14) and worked at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne. Emmanuelle Mathieu is Lecturer at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland. Previously, she was a Marie Curie research fellow at the Barcelona Institute for International Studies, Spain.