The fundamental right to an effective judicial protection and the rule of law in the EU and their impact on Member States’ administration of justice
Abstract
The recognition of effective judicial protection under European Union
law affects national regulations on the administration of justice. There is no doubt
that the competence to regulate and act upon matters relating to the organisation and
functioning of the national judiciary is an exclusive national competence, not
conferred to the Union by the Member States. However, over the last couple of
years, the Court of Justice has been implying that national measures concerning the
national administration of justice cannot be contrary to the regulations on judicial
protection as recognised by the Union. This European regulation works as a limit to
those national measures related to the administration of justice, opening the door to
a judicial review (or control) of these measures; a judicial control that uses
European Union law (that relating to effective judicial protection) as a parameter or
measure of judgment (review or control of “europeanness”). These pages discuss on
which legal bases, in which cases and with which mechanisms this review is taking
place.