Council Regulation (EU) 2019/1111 of 25 June 2019 on jurisdiction - CP/2022/26

Start Date: Wednesday, May 25, 2022
End Date: Thursday, May 26, 2022
Category: Civil Law National Law
Venue: Judicial Academy of Croatia, Zagreb
Language(s): English, Croatian
Training level: Introductory, Advanced
Type EJTN-funded activities

  

APPLICATION PROCEDURES ARE HANDLED BY EJTN'S MEMBER ORGANISATIONS 

TRAINING CONTENT AND TARGET AUDIENCE

 

PRACTICAL INFORMATION

Description: 

The European Union has enacted significant changes in the regime of jurisdiction regarding the issues of parental responsibility for children, the abduction by a parent, but also in the field of recognition and enforcement of judgments in marital cases and parental responsibility cases. Therefore, the workshop will analyse, as key issues, the changes in the relevant provisions. However, the EU has been continuously enacting the regulations on family and succession matters that are interconnected and interrelated. At the same time, the EU Court of Justice has been faced with new questions and possible solutions in this field that also need to be addressed in the context of this Regulation.

Trainers: a family law judge of the Municipal Civil Court of Zagreb and a university law professor 


Target audience: 

 Judges, prosecutors, judicial advisors

 

 

Application procedure: 

All applications must be submitted through the candidates' national EJTN member institution.

Participation:

Upon invitation by EJTN, participants register via EJTN online  platform to which they receive access.
After the event, reimbursement is processed via EJTN online platform.

Useful documents:

TERMS AND CONDITIONS.pdf

FAQ_section EN.pdf

Allocation of Places: 

BG (1) - DE (1) - IT (1) - PL (2) - PT (2) - RO (2) – SI (1)

Deadline for application:

4 April 2022

PROGRAMME AND DOCUMENTATION

 

CONTACT(S)

Draft Programme:

Available as soon as possible

 

EJTN Secretariat:

Ms. Brandi Brown-Moreau:
brandi.brown-moreau@ejtn.eu

 

 

Judges and prosecutors are trained to exercise their judicial roles, but they generally receive no training in management, even though these skills are indispensable when they reach management positions.  This is especially the case for new heads of courts, who will necessarily be confronted with human and organisational issues requiring specific training.  The aim of this course is to present management techniques suited to the specific structure of a court, particularly as regards the way it operates and the status of the judges and prosecutors working in it. It is intended both for newly appointed heads of courts as well as their more experienced counterparts who would like to reflect on and share their practices.