Yuu Shibata#11509

Yuu Shibata

She holds a Ph.D. in EU Law (University of Bologna). Currently, she works as a senior legal consultant at Mazzeschi SRL and she is the Head of the Japanese Desk and Spanish Desk of the same company.

She has developed extensive experience working in the Japanese – Italian market either from a legal point of view to a cross-culture communication point of view.

She regularly contributes to various platforms (either academic or business oriented) with articles related to EU law, Italian Immigration, and Italian Company law.  

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2013

Experience

  • Mazzeschi SRL (2018 - Present)

Membership

  • paradiGM Community (Co-founder)

Qualifications

  • PhD in EU Law (2016)
  • Lawyer (non-practising) (2013)
  • LLB (2012)

Education

  • University of Bologna (Italy) (2013-2016)
  • University of Granada (Spain) (2010-2011)
  • University of San Francisco Xavier (Bolivia) (2008-2012)

3 Contributions by Yuu Shibata

A Practitioner’s Guide to EU/Schengen Border Management: Short‑Stay Visas, VIS, SIS, EES, ETIAS, Digitalisation, Appeals and 90/180‑day Rules
PRACTICE NOTES
A Practitioner’s Guide to EU/Schengen Border Management: Short‑Stay Visas, VIS, SIS, EES, ETIAS, Digitalisation, Appeals and 90/180‑day Rules
EU external border governance has been in continual flux, driven in particular by the exceptional influx of refugees, irregular migration, and the digitalisation of control mechanisms. A closer look at amendments to the Schengen Borders Code also makes clear how lessons from the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic have shaped its evolution over recent years. The EU’s principal aims here include progressively creating an integrated management framework for the external frontiers, strengthening backing for migration management, intensifying action against cross-border crime, and bolstering national authorities to improve internal security. The ‘EU Migration and Asylum’ policy forms a significant strand of external border control more broadly. Nevertheless, this Practice Note does not examine that policy; instead it concentrates on the general Schengen visa regime, the core instruments and platforms already deployed—the Visa Information System (VIS) and the Schengen Information System (SIS)—and those still awaiting operation—the Entry/Exit System (EES) and the European Travel Information and Authorisation system (ETIAS). Background information To begin with, when considering the EU cross-border control architecture and its visa policy, it is crucial, indeed, to identify precisely and clearly which countries are genuinely covered, in scope for these arrangements, as a starting point, for any meaningful analysis, and...
EU Law
EU Schengen Borders Code: 2024 Reforms, Border Controls, Public Health Measures, Temporary Reintroduction, Transfer Procedure, Entry Rules for EU and third-country nationals, and Related Systems (SIS, VIS, EES, ETIAS)
PRACTICE NOTES
EU Schengen Borders Code: 2024 Reforms, Border Controls, Public Health Measures, Temporary Reintroduction, Transfer Procedure, Entry Rules for EU and third-country nationals, and Related Systems (SIS, VIS, EES, ETIAS)
The removal of internal border checks across the Schengen Area stands as one of the EU’s landmark achievements, shaping and embedding the European societal model and way of life. Yet major developments—such as the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and rising irregular migration—have exposed shortcomings and loopholes in Schengen border management. To address the migration challenges faced by Member States and to uphold border-free movement within Schengen, significant revisions were adopted in 2024. This Practice Note concentrates on Regulation (EU) 2016/399, the Union Code on the rules governing the movement of persons across borders (codification), which sets out the conditions for movement to and from the area without internal border control, as well as between participating Member States. It also reflects the 2024 amendments, drawing out the principal features of the current framework and outlining the accompanying instruments that clarify how the Schengen borders management system operates. Notably, the free movement of persons within the EEC was among the core aims of the Treaty of Rome (1958–1967), laying the foundations for today’s arrangements…
EU Law
Italy business law and investment guide: corporate set-up, contracts, employment, tax and incentives, insolvency, real estate, compliance, IP, dispute resolution and 2023–2025 reforms
PRACTICE NOTES
Italy business law and investment guide: corporate set-up, contracts, employment, tax and incentives, insolvency, real estate, compliance, IP, dispute resolution and 2023–2025 reforms
Updated in April 2026 Introduction Italy is a parliamentary republic with a two‑chamber system. The Prime Minister serves as Head of Government. Parliament comprises the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. The President of the Republic designates the Prime Minister, who must obtain Parliament’s confidence. The President’s term spans seven years. Parliamentary general elections are held every five years. Italy follows a civil law tradition. Its legal sources comprise the Constitution, statutes, secondary legislation, EU regulations (directly applicable and not requiring implementation) and EU directives (which must be enacted through national legislation). The nation is organised into 20 regions. The Constitution grants regions legislative powers in specific fields, including public health, education, agriculture and tourism. Italy is a founding member of the EU. Business environment Italy ranks among the world’s largest economies, typically within the top ten by GDP, and is Europe’s second‑largest manufacturing economy. It remains a leading country globally for manufacturing, exports and a goods trade surplus, with industrial activity concentrated in the north...
Commercial
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