原产国原则与母国与东道国管辖权的平衡

K. Sørensen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

原产国原则经常被用作旨在实现内部市场的二级立法的基础。即使这一原则确实促进了自由流动,但其后果是东道国会员国在某种程度上失去了管制在其领土上发生的活动的能力。在某些情况下,这种监管主权的丧失及其后果似乎特别不可接受。当审视原产国原则是如何实施的时候,很明显,有不同的机制来确保东道国和/或母国可以防止这些不可接受的影响。因此,通过立法者和欧洲联盟法院的相互作用,东道国会员国并非没有保护。原籍国原则被用于二级法的许多不同领域,但尽管如此,在母国成员国和东道国成员国之间平衡管辖权问题的解决办法或多或少是相同的,而且似乎正在形成一个整体模式。为了描述这一模式,本文考察了在颁发授权、许可证等时如何考虑东道国的利益。接下来,它审查了东道国成员国在多大程度上有责任承认授权、许可等,以及东道国成员国在多大程度上仍然可以规范授权、许可等持有人的活动。根据不同地区适用原产国原则对这些方面进行了评估,并将这些地区的解决方案与公司法中的解决方案进行了对比,在公司法中出现了一个非常不同的原则版本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Country‐of‐Origin Principle and Balancing Jurisdiction Between Home Member States and Host Member State
The country‐of‐origin principle is frequently used as the foundation for secondary legislation aiming to realise the internal market. Even if it does promote free movement, the principle also has the consequence that host Member States to some extent lose the ability to regulate activities occurring in their territories. In some situations, such a loss of regulatory sovereignty and the consequences hereof may seem particularly unacceptable. When looking at how the country‐of‐origin principle is implemented, it becomes clear that there are different mechanisms in place to ensure that the host and/or the home Member State may prevent some of these unacceptable effects. Consequently, through the interaction of the legislator and the Court of Justice of the European Union the host Member States are not without protection. The country‐of‐origin principle is used in many different areas of secondary law, but nevertheless, the solutions to the problem of balancing jurisdiction between the home Member State and the host Member State are more or less the same, and an overall model seems to be developing. To describe this model, the paper examines how the interests of the host Member States are taken into account when issuing an authorisation, license etc. Next, it examines the extent to which the host Member State has the duty to recognise the authorisation, licence etc., and the extent to which the host Member State may still regulate the activities of the holder of an authorisation, licence etc. These aspects are evaluated in the light of different areas applying the country‐of‐origin principle, and it is contrasting the solutions found in these areas with the solutions found in company law, where a very different version of the principle has emerged.
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