Union citizens and the recognition of professional qualifications: where do we go from here?
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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Union citizens and the recognition of professional qualifications : where do we go from here? / Adamo, Silvia; Binder, Tom.
EU Citizens' Economic Rights in Action: Re-Thinking Legal and Factual Barriers in the Internal Market. ed. / Sybe de Vries; Elena Ioratti; Paolo Guarda; Elisabetta Pulice. Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018. p. 37-59 (Interdisciplinary Perspectives on EU Citizenship series).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Union citizens and the recognition of professional qualifications
T2 - where do we go from here?
AU - Adamo, Silvia
AU - Binder, Tom
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - A fast and efficient recognition procedure can open the door to an easy insertion into a foreign EU labour market. Since the 1960s, EU legislations and institutions have fostered a detailed system for recognition of professional qualifications to help Union citizens make use of their titles and skills across the Union. The system for mutual recognition of professional qualifications is supposed to alleviate the national markets’ shortage of labour, enhancing the intra-mobility of professionals and acting as a guarantee for their skills. However, the agreement on this mutual system has not been easy to achieve, and many administrative hurdles persist at a national level. In this chapter, after reviewing the legislation in the area, a selection of Member States’ practices will be used as a showcase for the practical, cultural, and economic barriers Union citizens may encounter when they move to another Member State and wish to exercise their profession.
AB - A fast and efficient recognition procedure can open the door to an easy insertion into a foreign EU labour market. Since the 1960s, EU legislations and institutions have fostered a detailed system for recognition of professional qualifications to help Union citizens make use of their titles and skills across the Union. The system for mutual recognition of professional qualifications is supposed to alleviate the national markets’ shortage of labour, enhancing the intra-mobility of professionals and acting as a guarantee for their skills. However, the agreement on this mutual system has not been easy to achieve, and many administrative hurdles persist at a national level. In this chapter, after reviewing the legislation in the area, a selection of Member States’ practices will be used as a showcase for the practical, cultural, and economic barriers Union citizens may encounter when they move to another Member State and wish to exercise their profession.
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 978-1-78811-345-8
T3 - Interdisciplinary Perspectives on EU Citizenship series
SP - 37
EP - 59
BT - EU Citizens' Economic Rights in Action
A2 - de Vries, Sybe
A2 - Ioratti, Elena
A2 - Guarda, Paolo
A2 - Pulice, Elisabetta
PB - Edward Elgar Publishing
ER -
ID: 187264487