prof. dr. Matej Avbelj Visokošolski učitelj
Matej Avbelj je izredni profesor za evropsko pravo na Fakulteti za državne in evropske študije. Doktoriral je na Evropskem univerzitetnem inštitutu v Firencah, magistriral na NYU School of Law in diplomiral na Pravni fakulteti Univerze v Ljubljani. Kot sodniški pripravnik je služboval na Višjem sodišču v Ljubljani, praktične izkušnje pa je nabiral tudi v Evropskem parlamentu kot Robert Schuman stažist v oddelku za ustavne zadeve. Njegovo raziskovanje in akademsko delo je osredotočeno na pravo EU, ustavno pravo in teorijo prava. Aktiven je tudi v stanovskih akademskih in civilnodružbenih iniciativah tako doma kot po svetu.
Avbelj, Matej; Komarek, Jan. Constitutional Pluralism in the European Union and Beyond (Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2012).
Avbelj, Matej. Sodno pravo Evropske unije. (GV Založba, 2011).
Avbelj, Matej. Theory of European Union. (European Law Review, Vol. 6, 2011).
Avbelj, Matej. Supremacy or Primacy of EU Law – (Why) Does it Matter? (European Law Journal, Vol. 17, št. 6, 2011).
Avbelj, Matej. Doktrina Costanzo: Vpliv prava EU na položaj in pristojnosti upravnih organov v nacionalnem sistemu delitve oblasti (Pravnik, let. 65, št. 11-12, str. 815-836,
Njegova celotna bibliografija je dostopna na:
http://splet02.izum.si/cobiss/bibliography?code=31643&langbib=eng.
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Matej Avbelj is Professor of European Law at the New University, Ljubljana, Slovenia. He graduated from University of Ljubljana Faculty of Law, obtained an LL.M at NYU School of Law and defended his PhD at the European University Institute. Dr. Avbelj has been awarded several fellowships and research grants and has acted as a guest lecturer at many universities in Europe and the USA. He has written extensively in the fields of EU law, constitutional law and legal theory. His books, for example, include: The Impact of European Institutions on the Rule of Law and Democracy in Slovenia and Beyond (Hart forthcoming 2020, with Jernej Letnar Černič); The European Union under Transnational law (Hart, 2018); Research Handbook on Legal Pluralism and EU Law (Edward Elgar 2018, co-edited with Gareth Davies); Kadi on Trial: A Multifaceted Analysis of the Kadi Trial (Routledge 2016, co-edited with Giuseppe Martinico and Filippo Fontanelli); Constitutional Pluralism in the EU and beyond (Hart 2012; co-edited with Jan Komarek). He is currently leading two research projects dedicated to the “Ideology in the Courts” and to the “Integral Theory of the Future of the European Union”, which are both generously supported by the Slovenian Research Agency.