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In the context of EU law, reverse discrimination occurs when the national law of a Member state of the European Union provides for worse treatment of its citizens or domestic products than other EU citizens/goods under EU law. Reverse discrimination is permitted in EU law because of the legal principle of subsidiarity, i.e. EU law is not applicable in situations purely internal to one Member State.

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  • Reverse Discrimination (EU Law) (en)
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  • In the context of EU law, reverse discrimination occurs when the national law of a Member state of the European Union provides for worse treatment of its citizens or domestic products than other EU citizens/goods under EU law. Reverse discrimination is permitted in EU law because of the legal principle of subsidiarity, i.e. EU law is not applicable in situations purely internal to one Member State. (en)
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  • In the context of EU law, reverse discrimination occurs when the national law of a Member state of the European Union provides for worse treatment of its citizens or domestic products than other EU citizens/goods under EU law. Reverse discrimination is permitted in EU law because of the legal principle of subsidiarity, i.e. EU law is not applicable in situations purely internal to one Member State. There are different treatments across national laws in the EU, with some EU states such as Italy making equality a legal requirement, while other EU states such as Ireland and Germany implement discrimination. The exception is EU citizens that can provide a cross-border link, either by travel or by holding dual EU citizenship. e.g. An Irish Citizen living in Germany with his family before returning to Ireland, these Irish Citizens can apply for EU family rights. This is referred to as the Surinder Singh route. The cross-border dimension has been the focus of many court cases in recent years, from McCarthy to Zambrano (en)
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