New website
Court’s website redesign: easier access to clear, comprehensive information.
This newly redesigned website is a key point of reference enabling citizens across the EU and beyond to connect with the Court and its work.
Bringing the site in line with the latest web standards, the revamp offers a clear and accessible experience for all visitors – whether legal professionals, researchers, students or citizens wishing to learn more about the Court. It focuses on three key changes:
- the information architecture is now intuitive and user-friendly;
- the design has been modernised, facilitating easy navigation and meeting high accessibility standards; and
- content has been rewritten in clear, understandable language – for experts and non-experts alike.
Visitors can now explore
- existing content that has been updated and streamlined, ranging from how to visit the Court to employment
- new content, including guidance on procedures before both the Court of Justice and the General Court, as well as sections on the Court’s history, how the Court’s case-law has impacted the lives of EU citizens, and guidance on how to access publicly available information
- information about how the Court works, the values that guide it, and its institutional policies, allowing citizens to better understand the inner workings of the Court
The site also serves as the gateway to two important resources: the redesigned InfoCuria case-law database and search engine, and the Court’s new audiovisual platform, Curia Web TV.
Available in all 24 official EU languages, the Curia website ensures that citizens across the Union can access information in their own language. For any pages that cannot be accessed in all languages, an automatic translation tool is available.
With these improvements, the Curia website reaffirms the Court’s commitment to transparency and openness as fundamental EU principles. It offers the public clearer insight into the Court’s role and easier access to information about the EU’s judicial system – helping to bring European justice closer to the public.
