Dolores Utrilla
Professor of Administrative Law at the University of Castilla-La Mancha; currently serving as Law Clerk at the Spanish Constitutional Court.
She was legal advisor at the Ministry of the Presidence (Government of Spain) between 2018 and 2020 and collaborated with EU Law Live as Editor between 2020 and 2022.
Law Degree (2008), LLM on European Law (2010) and PhD (2014) by the UCLM. Intensive I.LL.MM. by the European Academy of Public Law (2009).
National Rapporteur for Spain in the UCL / King's College London / MPI Heidelberg 'Lex Atlas: Covid-19' Research Project. Member of the Research Network on EU Administrative Law (ReNEUAL). Research Fellow of the Center for European Studies of the UCLM (Centro de Estudios Europeos, CEE) and of the International Network of European Law (Red Internacional de Derecho Europeo, RIDE).
She has conducted research stays in Germany (University of Hamburg, 2010-2011), the United States (University of Georgetown, 2016), and Luxembourg (University of Luxembourg, 2017). Fellow of the national program FPU (2009-2011), she speaks English, German, and Italian. Her doctoral thesis on the legal regime of private takings was awarded a Prize of Honour in the European Group of Public Law Thesis Prize and the Doctoral Extraordinary Prize by the University of Castilla-La Mancha.
Her areas of interests are Administrative Law, European Union Law, Public Economic Law, Human Rights Law and Multilevel constitutionalism.
She has lectured public law in graduate and in postgraduate programs at the Faculty of Law and Social Sciences (UCLM) from 2011 onwards. She has been Academic Secretary of the aforementioned Faculty between 2014 and 2017.
Address: Facultad de Derecho y Ciencias Sociales
Ronda de Toledo s/n
13071 Ciudad Real
She was legal advisor at the Ministry of the Presidence (Government of Spain) between 2018 and 2020 and collaborated with EU Law Live as Editor between 2020 and 2022.
Law Degree (2008), LLM on European Law (2010) and PhD (2014) by the UCLM. Intensive I.LL.MM. by the European Academy of Public Law (2009).
National Rapporteur for Spain in the UCL / King's College London / MPI Heidelberg 'Lex Atlas: Covid-19' Research Project. Member of the Research Network on EU Administrative Law (ReNEUAL). Research Fellow of the Center for European Studies of the UCLM (Centro de Estudios Europeos, CEE) and of the International Network of European Law (Red Internacional de Derecho Europeo, RIDE).
She has conducted research stays in Germany (University of Hamburg, 2010-2011), the United States (University of Georgetown, 2016), and Luxembourg (University of Luxembourg, 2017). Fellow of the national program FPU (2009-2011), she speaks English, German, and Italian. Her doctoral thesis on the legal regime of private takings was awarded a Prize of Honour in the European Group of Public Law Thesis Prize and the Doctoral Extraordinary Prize by the University of Castilla-La Mancha.
Her areas of interests are Administrative Law, European Union Law, Public Economic Law, Human Rights Law and Multilevel constitutionalism.
She has lectured public law in graduate and in postgraduate programs at the Faculty of Law and Social Sciences (UCLM) from 2011 onwards. She has been Academic Secretary of the aforementioned Faculty between 2014 and 2017.
Address: Facultad de Derecho y Ciencias Sociales
Ronda de Toledo s/n
13071 Ciudad Real
less
InterestsView All (23)
Uploads
Books by Dolores Utrilla
La investigación analítica recogida en estas páginas pretende servir para evaluar la efectividad práctica del Sistema de Alerta Temprana, así como para identificar posibilidades de mejora en su regulación y aplicación a la luz de sus condicionantes jurídico-políticos. Para ello, en la obra se examinan, en primer lugar, los presupuestos institucionales y constitucionales (tanto europeos como internos) de la participación de las asambleas legislativas autonómicas en el Sistema. Los resultados derivados de este análisis se utilizan, a continuación, para realizar un enjuiciamiento crítico de su regulación positiva y de su aplicación práctica en España durante los siete primeros años de su vigencia (2010-2016).
Edited Books by Dolores Utrilla
This book looks at the EU’s legal response to the pandemic across a wide spectrum of areas of law. Structured into 35 chapters written by leading legal experts from the EU institutional and academic landscape, it offers a narrative of the evolution, scope, and spirit of the EU’s approach to a crisis like no other in the history of European integration. It thus provides for a comprehensive overview of the legal dimension of the COVID-19 crisis in the unique supranational arena of the EU that can be of interest to policy-makers, practitioners, and academics in Europe and beyond.
Book Chapters by Dolores Utrilla
have been subjected to European harmonization, the three analyzed sectors are crossed by some horizontal or structural common elements regarding the allocation of limited authorizations. The identification and analysis of such structural elements are of interest in terms of general administrative law in so far as they are traceable to abstract elements of a general system of allocation of any limited authorization."
La investigación analítica recogida en estas páginas pretende servir para evaluar la efectividad práctica del Sistema de Alerta Temprana, así como para identificar posibilidades de mejora en su regulación y aplicación a la luz de sus condicionantes jurídico-políticos. Para ello, en la obra se examinan, en primer lugar, los presupuestos institucionales y constitucionales (tanto europeos como internos) de la participación de las asambleas legislativas autonómicas en el Sistema. Los resultados derivados de este análisis se utilizan, a continuación, para realizar un enjuiciamiento crítico de su regulación positiva y de su aplicación práctica en España durante los siete primeros años de su vigencia (2010-2016).
This book looks at the EU’s legal response to the pandemic across a wide spectrum of areas of law. Structured into 35 chapters written by leading legal experts from the EU institutional and academic landscape, it offers a narrative of the evolution, scope, and spirit of the EU’s approach to a crisis like no other in the history of European integration. It thus provides for a comprehensive overview of the legal dimension of the COVID-19 crisis in the unique supranational arena of the EU that can be of interest to policy-makers, practitioners, and academics in Europe and beyond.
have been subjected to European harmonization, the three analyzed sectors are crossed by some horizontal or structural common elements regarding the allocation of limited authorizations. The identification and analysis of such structural elements are of interest in terms of general administrative law in so far as they are traceable to abstract elements of a general system of allocation of any limited authorization."
Law, where it has raised a relevant constitutional debate. This study examines the terms in which such
debate has been developed in Germany, France and the United States. The main legal problems posed
by private takings are identified, and the solutions offered to them by the examined legal orders are
stressed. The results of the comparative analysis might be of interest for Spanish legal operators, both
at a positive and at a normative level.