Legal Guidance and Research / Experts / Michala Meiselles

Michala Meiselles

Michala Meiselles is a solicitor and senior law lecturer at the University of Derby. Prior to the University of Derby, she previously taught law as a lecturer at Université Jean Moulin (France) and Aix Marseille Université (France). She runs her own consultancy firm that provides strategic solutions and specialised services to multinationals and international organisations. She has a particular interest in international business transactions, trade law, corporate law and cross-border investments. Ms Meiselles read law at Manchester University (graduating in 1994) and completed an LL.M. in European and International Law and Policy at Manchester University in 2003. She has been working as a lawyer since 1995 and qualified as a solicitor in England and Wales in 1999. Upon qualification as a solicitor, Ms Meiselles moved into private practice where she specialised in commercial, insurance and banking litigation representing inter alia global insurance and banking clients as well as public sector agencies and multinationals. For over a decade, she has been providing professional training to solicitors, attorneys and executives in the fields of international corporate law, business ethics and professional standards, client care, anti-money laundering law and practice, anti-bribery and corruption law and practice, European law and policy, international trade law and international business law. She holds and has held visiting positions at law and business schools in Europe, the Middle East and North America, including Université Cergy Pontoise (France), University of Western Ontario (Canada), Grenoble Ecole de Management (France) and the University of Georgia in Athens (US). Ms Meiselles researches and writes in the fields of international corporate law, corporate criminal liability and international business law. One of her recent publications is a paper entitled ‘Civil Law Consequences of Corruption and Bribery in France’ (published in 2009 by Nomos in a book entitled ‘The Civil Law Consequences of Corruption’). Her book entitled ‘International Commercial Agreements – An Edinburgh Law Guide’ which addresses cross-jurisdictional business transactions is published by Edinburgh University Press. She is presently co-authoring a textbook entitled International Licensing Agreements – A Guide for Practitioners.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualifications

  • LPC Manchester Metropolitan University
  • LL.M Manchester University
  • LL.B (with honours) Manchester University

1 Contributions by Michala Meiselles

EU preliminary references: Article 267 TFEU duties, 'national court or tribunal' test, 2024 General Court jurisdiction, procedure, interventions, expedited/urgent routes, rectification, interpretation, and costs
PRACTICE NOTES
EU preliminary references: Article 267 TFEU duties, 'national court or tribunal' test, 2024 General Court jurisdiction, procedure, interventions, expedited/urgent routes, rectification, interpretation, and costs
If a national court or tribunal in an EU Member State considers the meaning of a point of EU law unclear for a live dispute, it may—and in certain instances must—seek a preliminary ruling from the Court of Justice or the General Court. This Practice Note sets out the characteristics of the preliminary ruling mechanism together with: the scope and aims of the mechanism the situations in which a court or tribunal may, or is obliged to, submit a preliminary reference the proper moment to lodge the request for a preliminary ruling what is meant by ‘national court’ and ‘national tribunal’ for these purposes the method for making a request for a preliminary ruling, and the phases of a preliminary reference Background reading and statistics on preliminary references can be found in the annual reports of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). Definitions and rules Definitions Terms used in this Practice Note: Referring Court—the court or tribunal in a Member State that submits the request; see Recommendations 2024, para 9, which describes the Referring Court. In doing so, it refers to the power to make a reference as provided...
EU Law
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