Dear readers,
We are delighted that you continue to visit our blog, which is dedicated to legal scholarship in European and comparative administrative law. In the past twelve months, the blog has attracted more than 25,000 views.
Since September 2024, we have published 30 posts covering a broad spectrum of topics – from fundamental rights and institutional questions to data protection, environmental issues or financial policy. We also featured a thematic series presenting chapters from the edited volume Administrative Cooperation in the Administrative Space.
The most read posts on the blog in the past academic year were:
- One step closer after KS and KD: EU accession to the ECHR, by Jasper Krommendijk
- The Court of Crotone on the Libyan Coast Guard: interception and returns to Libya are not rescue operations. Will it be enough to stop EU funding?, by Andreina De Leo
- The Uncertain Limits of European Union Sanctions and the Role of Proportionality, by Marie Terlinden
If you have not read them yet, make sure to put them on your summer to-read list!
We are also pleased to see the continued readership of the Review of European Administrative Law. It is particularly encouraging to find articles from the review cited in documents of the CJEU, especially in several AG opinions.
For the next academic year, we are preparing new series and developing additional plans. So, stay tuned! We also warmly welcome contributions on topics related any issues of European or comparative administrative law.
The blog will now take a short summer break, and we will be back in September.
Wishing you a relaxing and enjoyable summer.
Yseult and Pavlina

