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        <dc:identifier>https://verfassungsblog.de/greece-eppo-afsj/</dc:identifier>
        <dc:title>Why Primacy Operates Differently in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice - EPPO, Article 67 TFEU and the Limits of Primacy in Criminal Constitutional Law</dc:title>
        <dc:creator>Kotsalis, Philippos-Georgios</dc:creator>
        <dc:creator>Heger, Martin</dc:creator>
        <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
        <dc:date>2026-04-15</dc:date>
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        <dc:subject>ddc:342</dc:subject>
        <dc:subject>AFSJ</dc:subject>
        <dc:subject>Criminal Law</dc:subject>
        <dc:subject>EPPO</dc:subject>
        <dc:subject>Greece</dc:subject>
        <dc:publisher>Verfassungsblog</dc:publisher>
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        <dc:description>The EPPO’s anti-corruption mandate meets a constitutional constraint in Greece, where only Parliament may initiate proceedings against ministers. The familiar logic of EU primacy offers no easy way through, as Union law itself leaves gaps and accommodates national procedural orders. What emerges instead is a structural limit: in criminal law, integration proceeds within – not against – constitutional tradition.</dc:description>
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