MELS 2021-2023 - Year 1 

TEST MELS Online (original) template
It is well-established that for a number of reasons - economic, legal and political - the Internal Market lies at the core of the European integration process. As such, it is the first area of substantive European law with which students should become acquainted. The first teaching unit of the second semester is dedicated entirely to the concept of the internal market, and the cornerstones on which it is founded: The Customs Union and the Four Freedoms (that is, the free movement of goods, persons, services and capital). In this way, students are provided with an in-depth view of the economic dimension of the process of European integration, not to mention the necessary foundations for the study of other policy areas intrinsically related to the Internal Market, such as competition law, consumer law, intellectual property law, etc.
TU 801 - EU Enlargement and Neighbourhood Policy
T.U. 801 - BROADENING, DEEPENING AND REFORM OF THE EU Having begun with an account of the history of the European integration process, the first academic year concludes with an excursus into its future.   This future is considered both from the perspective of ‘broadening’ of the EU (the enlargement process and the legal aspects thereof), and that of reform of the EU. This is complemented by a general course on the future of the European integration process, which looks especially at that which may be referred to as the concept of ‘deepening’ of the EU.
TU 812 - European Economic Law
EUROPEAN ECONOMIC LAW Following on from the Internal Market, the study of substantive EU law is continued with a series of five courses concerning policy areas of a distinctly economic nature, hence the title of this teaching unit: European Economic Law. These are EU competition law and policy, public procurement, economic and monetary union, European company law and European tax law, all of which have a strong connection with the completion and proper functioning of the Internal Market. It is also interesting to juxtapose these diverse subjects as this serves to demonstrate the fact that the various policy areas in which the EU has some competence differ greatly in the extent to which they have been harmonised - or even ‘centralised’ - at European level.
TU 811: From Customs Union to Internal Market and Beyond copy 1
It is well-established that for a number of reasons - economic, legal and political - the Internal Market lies at the core of the European integration process. As such, it is the first area of substantive European law with which students should become acquainted. The first teaching unit of the second semester is dedicated entirely to the concept of the internal market, and the cornerstones on which it is founded: The Customs Union and the Four Freedoms (that is, the free movement of goods, persons, services and capital). In this way, students are provided with an in-depth view of the economic dimension of the process of European integration, not to mention the necessary foundations for the study of other policy areas intrinsically related to the Internal Market, such as competition law, consumer law, intellectual property law, etc.
TU 703: Introduction to European Geopolitics. Theories of the European Integration Process copy 1
Institutional Law and Decision-Making Processes of the EU - Juan Diego Ramírez-Cárdenas Díaz 
TU 702: Sources of EU Law, the Judicial System of the EU and EU Judicial Remedies copy 2
Sources of EU Law, the Judicial System of the EU and EU Judicial Remedies
TU 701: Institutional Law and Decision-Making Processes of the EU copy 1
Institutional Law and Decision-Making Processes of the EU
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