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A selective bibliography with annotations

Part Two: Secondary sources. Monographic literature

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 February 2019

Gerhard J. Dahlmanns*
Affiliation:
Institut für Rechtsvergleichung, Universität Marburg, Universitätsstraße 6, D-355 Marburg/Lahn, Fed. Rep. of Germany

Extract

This is a selective annotated bibliography, in three parts, on the law of the European Communities, confined to separate publications and not listing articles. It tries to assemble a considerable part of the basic literature on Community law as it stands now, and it has been written for those engaged in legal research, teaching, practice and library service, who need more specific and better accessible bibliographic information on the subject than it is now available.

Type
Bibliography
Copyright
Copyright © International Association of Law Libraries 1975 

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References

1 For technical reasons, part two of this bibliography is published first. Parts one and three will follow in the next issue of the Journal.Google Scholar

2 For a first survey of official Community publications see Fitz Gerald and Emringer, supra p. 208.Google Scholar

3 For England see e. g. the statement on minimum library holdings in The Journal of the Society of Public Teachers of Law, vol. XIII (1974), no. 2, pp. 113 et seq.Google Scholar

4 Examples of this useful category are, in Germany, the penetrating collective book reviews by Zuleeg, M., which have appeared in the Archiv des öffentlichen Recht, vol. 97 (1972), pp. 433 et seq., vol. 99 (1974), pp. 130 et eq. and vol. 100 (1975), pp. 291 et seq.Google Scholar