OAR@UM Community: /library/oar/handle/123456789/1902 2026-05-29T17:43:59Z 2026-05-29T17:43:59Z Evolving protections in collective redundancies : analysing recent ECJ decisions and their impact on employers, employees, and trade unions in EU labour law /library/oar/handle/123456789/146608 2026-05-20T13:17:32Z 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z Title: Evolving protections in collective redundancies : analysing recent ECJ decisions and their impact on employers, employees, and trade unions in EU labour law Abstract: The Collective Redundancies Directive (98/59/EC) remains a central instrument of European labour law, balancing the employer’s freedom to restructure with the protection of employees against the consequences of large-scale dismissals. This dissertation analyses how the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has shaped the Directive through its jurisprudence and examines the resulting impact on national legal systems, with Germany and Malta serving as case studies. The study demonstrates that the CJEU has expanded the Directive’s scope and clarified key concepts such as “worker”, “dismissal”, “establishment” and “controlling undertaking”. Landmark rulings including Junk v Kühnel, Balkaya, Bichat, AEK, Resorts Mallorca and MO v SM illustrate the Court’s role in strengthening procedural safeguards and reinforcing consultation obligations. While these judgments promote uniform protection, they also create tensions for employers, particularly in jurisdictions where national traditions diverge from the Court’s interpretation. The comparative analysis reveals significant differences in implementation. German law provides strong worker protection but generates uncertainty and litigation risks through its complex procedures and strict sanctions. Maltese law, by contrast, offers efficiency and predictability, though often at the expense of meaningful worker participation. These findings highlight the Directive’s partial harmonisation and the continuing variation in worker protection across Member States. The dissertation concludes that reform is necessary to ensure clarity, proportionality, and effectiveness. Recommendations include harmonising sanctions, clarifying definitions, enhancing consultation rights, and addressing challenges posed by digitalisation, platform work, and cross-border restructurings. Future research should explore the role of European Works Councils, the impact of algorithmic management, and protections for non-standard workers. The Directive, while pioneering, requires recalibration to remain fit for today’s labour markets and to maintain a fair balance between flexibility for employers and protection for workers. Description: LL.M.(Melit.) 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z The role of virtual asset service providers in money laundering : a comparative analysis of regulatory frameworks in Turkey and the EU /library/oar/handle/123456789/146606 2026-05-20T13:14:45Z 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z Title: The role of virtual asset service providers in money laundering : a comparative analysis of regulatory frameworks in Turkey and the EU Abstract: The rise of crypto-assets has transformed the global financial landscape, creating both opportunities for innovation and risks to financial integrity. As exchanges, custodians, and other intermediaries emerged to facilitate the trading, storage, and transfer of these assets, regulators confronted the challenge of extending anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing frameworks to an industry defined by anonymity, borderless transactions, and rapid technological change. This dissertation will examine the legal regimes that govern CASPs in their role as intermediaries within the crypto-asset ecosystem. The European Union operationalized these standards through successive directives and, more recently, through directly applicable regulations such as the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation and the Transfer of Funds Regulation. Türkiye, under pressure from its FATF grey-listing, incorporated CASPs into its AML legislation, strengthened sanctions compliance, and ultimately embedded them within capital markets law, backed by detailed MASAK notices and Capital Markets Board Regulations. After comprehensively evaluating the legal frameworks any gaps or shortcomings will be addressed and their potential impact and real world applications will be provided. One of which is the current exclusion of decentralized exchanges which if stays unregulated could have catastrophic adverse effects just as the previous FTX crisis. Description: LL.M.(Melit.) 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z A new ‘green’ era for the EU : what role for competition law? /library/oar/handle/123456789/146604 2026-05-20T13:11:29Z 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z Title: A new ‘green’ era for the EU : what role for competition law? Abstract: This dissertation explores the intersection of EU competition law and sustainability, asking whether the current framework can coherently integrate environmental objectives without undermining legal certainty, consistency, and effective enforcement. It focuses on the structural tension between competition law’s traditional price-centred objectives and EU’s constitutional commitment to sustainability. The dissertation is centred around competition law’s three pillars, and analyses how sustainability agreements are treated under the more flexible Article 101 TFEU and EU Merger Regulation, and the rigid Article 102 TFEU. The study moreover identifies enforcement inconsistencies, focusing on the progressive Dutch ACM, the radical Austria and the more cautious Bundeskartellamt, alongside a comparative analysis of the more progressive UK CMA. It reviews academic sources to highlight concerns about fragmented enforcement and the lack of consistent legal methodology. The findings underline the limits of the current framework in accommodating sustainability and point to the need for reinterpretation or reform to ensure coherence between competition law and EU’s wider constitutional objectives. Description: LL.M.(Melit.) 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z A tale of two European courts : Strasbourg and Luxembourg. How is the citizen protected? Sammut, Ivan /library/oar/handle/123456789/145426 2026-04-09T06:03:04Z 2026-01-01T00:00:00Z Title: A tale of two European courts : Strasbourg and Luxembourg. How is the citizen protected? Authors: Sammut, Ivan Abstract: This paper examines the legal distinction between the two European courts that are often conflated, yet are markedly different. The Court of Justice of the European Union, based in Luxembourg is the EU's Court, but it also directly influences national legal systems. It cannot be considered an international court in the literal sense. The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg is an international court par excellence, belonging to the Council of Europe, yet it is more accessible to individuals. Both courts address human rights in very different ways, but the CJEU's role is more limited in Human Rights and has a wider impact on individuals beyond Human Rights. Both courts contribute to European integration in their own way, yet they cannot be compared. They may be seen as competitors, but also as partners in some respects. This paper examines the relationship between the two and how it may evolve over the next decade or so. It examines the court from both individual and systemic perspectives, focusing on its contribution to stability and the rule of law. Finally, the paper examines how the possible relationship between the two can evolve in the individual's interest. 2026-01-01T00:00:00Z