Public Procurement
– Centralisation and new trends
Af
Carina Risvig Hamer, Kirsi-Maria Halonen, Magdalena Maria SochaPris
500 kr
Om bogen
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT – CENTRALISATION AND NEW TRENDS is part of the research project, Safeguarding competition and equal access to Central Purchasing Bodies’ agreements, known as the CPB Project and funded by the Independent Research Fund Denmark.
As part of the project, a conference was organised in 2023. The conference brought together academics and practitioners working with centralised procurement across Europe. This book contains contributions based on presentations given at the conference as well as some additional chapters within the area of centralisation and new trends in public procurement.
The publication is edited by Carina Risvig Hamer, professor of administrative law and public procurement at the University of Copenhagen, Kirsi-Maria Halonen, professor of public economic law at the University of Lapland, and Magdalena Socha, PhD fellow in EU public procurement law at the University of Copenhagen.
The contributors are Albert Sanchez-Graells, Atakilti H. Gebremichael, Carina Risvig Hamer, Cecilie Fanøe Petersen, Essi Puhakainen, Gloria Sdanganelli, Heidi Sander Løjmand, Jan Jääskeläinen, Janne Tukiainen, Joosua Virtanen, Kirsi-Maria Halonen, Magdalena Socha, Mario Comba, Peter Christian Nyborg Villadsen, Rasmus A.K. Bøgetoft, Rasmus Horskjær Nielsen, Roberta Lombardi, Stefano Rossa, Susmita Baulia and Torkil Schrøder-Hansen.
Udgave:
1
Udgivelsesdato:
12.04.2024
Sider:
347
ISBN:
9788757454796
Foreword
Abbreviations
Chapter 1. Introduction
Part 1. Centralisation
Chapter 2. CPBs in Scandinavia: Some perspectives on Denmark, Finland and Sweden
Chapter 3. The effects of centralised public procurement on prices and competition in Finland
Chapter 4. The reflection of economic objectives in centralised procurement rules
Chapter 5. Centralising procurement in the EU: the case of the new Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority (HERA)
Chapter 6. Joint cross-border procurement, between normative complexity and implementation difficulties
Chapter 7. Competitive landscape of parallel framework agreements
Chapter 8. Central purchasing bodies between public procurement rules and State aid rules
Part II. Trends
Chapter 9. Ensuring transparency in the call-off award with the reopening of mini-competition
Chapter 10. Dynamic purchasing systems (DPS)
Chapter 11. Are the flexible procedures promising too much by their name?
Chapter 12. Central purchasing bodies, digital technologies, and competition
Chapter 13. The trade-off between preferences and prices in framework agreements: Exploring a simple model
Chapter 14. Modification of framework agreements and contracts based on a framework agreement: Interpretation of EU law and hints for a comparative law
Chapter 15. To exclude, or not to exclude economic operators: That is the question
Chapter 16. A menu of contracts: Using framework agreements to create flexibility of choice
Contributors