Public services or more precisely, to use the EU’s terminology, 
services of general economic interest have traditionally played a vital 
role in the normal functioning of the society in the Member States. Yet,
 their equity or non-economic components have often caused tensions with
 the internal market components, such as the free movement of production
 factors, competition and economic efficiency. To put it simply, their 
place within the internal market has been for a long time a persistent 
irritant in the European public debate.
However, the situation has changed over time, in particular after the
 Lisbon Treaty which introduced the “new context” which seems to be more
 friendly to services of general economic interest than ever before. In 
this regard it is worth noting that, given the place occupied by 
services of general economic interest in the shared values of the EU as 
well as their role in promoting social and territorial cohesion, the EU 
and the Member States, each within their respective powers and within 
the scope of application of the Treaties, must take care that such 
services operate on the basis of principles and conditions, particularly
 economic and financial conditions, which enable them to fulfil their 
missions. It is a kind of joint responsibility for the effective 
provision of services of general economic interest which indicates that 
also the EU institutions must accept them as a building block of the 
European (market) integration process. In fact, the recent case law 
seems to support this thesis.
The Post-Lisbon state of play in the discussed field is in the center
 of the book but for practical reasons it also offers a broader view to a
 reader.
The book consists of the three interrelated chapters which relate in 
one way or another to services of general economic interest and 
corresponding supranational legal framework. The latter is par 
excellence topic of the EU (law). The introductory chapter is designed 
as the EU law toolkit which explains the values and aims of the EU, its 
competences and institutional structure, the fundamental legal 
principles and concepts which are of particular importance for services 
of general economic interest. This is followed by the second chapter, 
which sets the scene by explaining the socio-political background at the
 both levels, national and supranational.
In addition, the second chapter discusses the concept of services of 
general economic interest and related concepts. The third chapter is the
 very core of the book because it discusses the present EU’s legal 
framework for services of general economic interest. In addition to the 
general and sector-specific hard law, it includes most relevant case law
 and soft law. The main emphasis is, however, on the primary 
(constitutional) EU law, predominantly on the part relating market 
competition, e.g. Art. 101–109 TFEU, and on the part which directly 
address services of general economic interest, e.g. Art. 14 and the 
related Protocol, Art. 106(2) TFEU, and Art. 36 CFREU.
As such, the book could be interesting for all those who, in one way 
or another, deal with public services or services of general economic 
interest. Namely, the book is primarily oriented towards experts dealing
 with those services within the EU, however, due to its structure as 
well as gradualist and systematical approach, it can reach other readers
 as well and enable them to understand the EU’s legal framework for 
services of general economic interest.