Course teached as: B018989 - DIRITTO DELL'ECONOMIA E DELLO SVILUPPO TERRITORIALE Second Cycle Degree in POLITICAL SCIENCES AND DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES
Teaching Language
Italian.
Course Content
The course is divided into two parts.The first regards mainly the public utilities discipline, both at european and national level, in the perspective of the concept of Universal Service and the competiton law. The second part concerns, on the one hand, the development of the territory in the light of the planning law and the renewable energies, on the other hand, the landscape discipline in the light of the Europea Landscape Convention signed in Florence in 2000.
Foreign Students who attend the lessons and with a good knowledge of italian language:
1) Gian Franco Cartei, Il servizio universale, Milano, Giuffrè, 2002.
(Cap. I: paragrafi n. 5-8; Cap. II: par. n. 1-6 e 9-10; Cap. III par. I e 8-10; Cap. IV: par. 1 e 9-11; Cap. V. par. 5-10 e 13-16)
2) Gian Franco Cartei (a cura di), Cambiamento climatico e sviluppo sostenibile, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013.
(unicamente i seguenti capitoli: Fabrizio Fracchia "Cambiamento climatico e sviluppo sostenibile"; Gian Franco Cartei "Cambiamento climatico ed energie da fonti rinnovabili: una disciplina in cerca di equilibrio).
Students who do not attend the course or who do not have a good knowledge of italian language:
the content of the exam will be examined properly.
Learning Objectives
The course aims at offering a deep knowledge of the evolution of the legal discipline of the public utilities, on the one hand, and the environmental law, on the other hand.
To these aims the second part concerns the legal implication of the climate change and the landscape' discipline in the light of the European Landscape Convention of the 2000 and the Ue Treaty and european directives.
Teaching Methods
The course is taught by oral lessons
Type of Assessment
For foreign student who do not speak italian the exam will be oral or written.
Course program
The course aims at offering an analysis of the public utility legal discipline in the light of the competiton law. To this end there will be an historical and comparative overview about the development of the concept of the public utilities in United States and Europe.
A specific focus will be dedicated to the European Law and to the national level concerning the followinf public utilities: Telecommunications, Mail and Energy. Specific attention will be dedicated to the concept of 'Universal Service'.
The last part of the course will concern the urban planning law and the aspects concerning the landscape protection in the light of the concept of the sustainable development at national and regional level.