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Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law
European Procurement & Public Private Partnership Law Review, Volume: 12, Issue: 3, Pages: 239 - 252
Swansea University Author: Pedro Telles
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DOI (Published version): 10.21552/epppl/2017/3/7
Abstract
This article analyses the conceptual link between law and compliance, exploring the different theories and types of compliance (corporate, State and regulatory) and how they can be found today within the EU legal public procurement framework. The analytical focus is on Directive 2014/24/EU and withi...
Published in: | European Procurement & Public Private Partnership Law Review |
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ISSN: | 21947376 21947384 |
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2017
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa36710 |
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2018-09-13T11:57:19.6703176 v2 36710 2017-11-10 Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law cbb9f02a4820888c1b6c3ce352009a0b 0000-0002-0666-6351 Pedro Telles Pedro Telles true false 2017-11-10 LAWD This article analyses the conceptual link between law and compliance, exploring the different theories and types of compliance (corporate, State and regulatory) and how they can be found today within the EU legal public procurement framework. The analytical focus is on Directive 2014/24/EU and within it how sustainable requirements have increased the level of compliance required, particularly regulatory compliance. Compliance was already present in previous EU public procurement frameworks, but its extent on Directive 2014/24/EU leads the authors to consider the current legal framework as subject to substantial regulatory compliance obligations external to the process of procurement. In short, procurement has been transformed in a way to enforce regulatory obligations that are not intrinsic to the process of buying. This leads to the conclusion that questions such as the cost and trade offs from imposing compliance obligations to public and private bodies warrant further research, particularly at the legal, economic and political science intersection. Journal Article European Procurement & Public Private Partnership Law Review 12 3 239 252 21947376 21947384 Public procurement; Sustainability; EU; Directive 2014/24/EU; Compliance 3 9 2017 2017-09-03 10.21552/epppl/2017/3/7 https://epppl.lexxion.eu/article/EPPPL/2017/3/7 COLLEGE NANME Law COLLEGE CODE LAWD Swansea University 2018-09-13T11:57:19.6703176 2017-11-10T10:45:47.2977499 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law P. Telles 1 G.S. Ølykke 2 Pedro Telles 0000-0002-0666-6351 3 0036710-29112017133336.pdf SSRN-id3042673.pdf 2017-11-29T13:33:36.1400000 Output 278625 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2017-11-29T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law |
spellingShingle |
Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law Pedro Telles |
title_short |
Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law |
title_full |
Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law |
title_fullStr |
Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law |
title_sort |
Sustainable Procurement: A Compliance Perspective of EU Public Procurement Law |
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cbb9f02a4820888c1b6c3ce352009a0b |
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cbb9f02a4820888c1b6c3ce352009a0b_***_Pedro Telles |
author |
Pedro Telles |
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P. Telles G.S. Ølykke Pedro Telles |
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European Procurement & Public Private Partnership Law Review |
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12 |
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239 |
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2017 |
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Swansea University |
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10.21552/epppl/2017/3/7 |
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Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law |
url |
https://epppl.lexxion.eu/article/EPPPL/2017/3/7 |
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description |
This article analyses the conceptual link between law and compliance, exploring the different theories and types of compliance (corporate, State and regulatory) and how they can be found today within the EU legal public procurement framework. The analytical focus is on Directive 2014/24/EU and within it how sustainable requirements have increased the level of compliance required, particularly regulatory compliance. Compliance was already present in previous EU public procurement frameworks, but its extent on Directive 2014/24/EU leads the authors to consider the current legal framework as subject to substantial regulatory compliance obligations external to the process of procurement. In short, procurement has been transformed in a way to enforce regulatory obligations that are not intrinsic to the process of buying. This leads to the conclusion that questions such as the cost and trade offs from imposing compliance obligations to public and private bodies warrant further research, particularly at the legal, economic and political science intersection. |
published_date |
2017-09-03T03:46:01Z |
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1763752187006025728 |
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11.036334 |