Reconciling the Deepening and Widening of the European Union
, by Edited by Steven Blockmans , Sacha Prechal- ISBN: 9789067042642 | 9067042641
- Cover: Hardcover
- Copyright: 5/8/2008
Foreword | p. V |
Summary of contents | p. VII |
List of abbreviations | p. XV |
The European integration process: a continuum of 'deepening' and 'widening' | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 1 |
A short history of 'deepening' and 'widening' | p. 2 |
The EU's final frontier - and beyond | p. 4 |
The perceived need for further 'deepening' | p. 6 |
A flexible future for the European Union? | p. 8 |
The academic contribution: this volume | p. 10 |
A diagnosis of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: remedies and reforms in the domains of immigration, terrorism and security | p. 13 |
Introduction | p. 13 |
Diagnosing the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: the positive symptoms | p. 13 |
Diagnosing the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: the negative symptoms | p. 15 |
It's the decision-making rules, stupid! | p. 20 |
Would the Constitutional Treaty have been a good remedy? | p. 23 |
Finale | p. 25 |
Conclusion | p. 27 |
'Widening' vs. 'deepening' the European Union: free movement vs. social rights in the Laval case before the ECJ | p. 29 |
Introduction | p. 29 |
The Swedish Laval case as a starting point | p. 30 |
Social rights as fundamental rights exempted from EC free movement rules? | p. 32 |
Possible exemptions from Article 49 and 43 TEC for labour unions | p. 32 |
Article 137(5) TEC? | p. 32 |
'Non-statutory exemption' for trade unions derived from competition law? | p. 33 |
Freedom of contract? | p. 33 |
The importance of the Gustafsson and Rasmussen judgment of the ECtHR | p. 34 |
The Werhof judgment of the ECJ | p. 35 |
Constitutional traditions of Member States concerning social action | p. 35 |
The applicability of Article 49 TEC to social actions against the posting of workers in Laval | p. 37 |
The origin of the industrial conflict | p. 37 |
The posting of workers by Laval in Sweden as an exercise of the freedom to provide services | p. 38 |
Restrictions on the provision of services | p. 38 |
Obligations of the Swedish state | p. 39 |
Effects of Article 49 TEC against Byggnads, et al.? | p. 40 |
Preliminary results of the discussion | p. 41 |
Justifications | p. 41 |
The Lex Britannia | p. 42 |
Industrial action against an undertaking established in the European Union | p. 43 |
Equivalence of Swedish and Latvian collective bargaining agreements? | p. 45 |
The discriminatory element of action inherent in the Lex Britannia | p. 46 |
Directive 96/71 | p. 46 |
Objectives of the directive | p. 46 |
Article 3(1) of the Directive 96/71 | p. 47 |
The option for collective agreements under Article 3(8) | p. 48 |
Enforcement of eventual minimum pay obligations? | p. 50 |
Public policy exceptions under Article 3(10) in conjunction with constitutional law | p. 51 |
Effects of an eventual non-justification of industrial action | p. 52 |
Annex: Opinion of AG Mengozzi of 23 May 2007 | p. 55 |
Consolidating the enlargement agenda for South Eastern Europe | p. 59 |
Introduction | p. 59 |
The state of affairs | p. 61 |
Turkey | p. 61 |
Stabilisation and Association Process | p. 65 |
Raising the threshold | p. 65 |
A graduated process | p. 67 |
Croatia | p. 68 |
Macedonia (FYROM) | p. 72 |
The 'potential' candidate countries | p. 73 |
Novelties in pre-accession conditionality | p. 76 |
Multi-dimensional nature | p. 76 |
The requirement of regional cooperation | p. 77 |
Conundrum | p. 77 |
Reconciling enhanced bilateralism with enhanced multilateralism | p. 79 |
ICTY conditionality | p. 81 |
The revised procedure for accession negotiations | p. 82 |
Protecting the Union | p. 82 |
Benchmarking | p. 83 |
Concluding remarks | p. 85 |
Box of chocolates integration: the European Economic Area and the Swiss model revisited | p. 87 |
Introduction | p. 87 |
The basics: What do the enhanced multilateralism and bilateralism amount to? | p. 89 |
General remarks | p. 89 |
The institutional set-up | p. 91 |
The conundrum: how to reconcile the prerequisite of uniform application and interpretation of EU law with the enhanced multilateralism and bilateralism? | p. 93 |
Introductory remarks | p. 93 |
The nature of the European Economic Area and EC/EU-Swiss legal frameworks | p. 95 |
Legislative methods for securing homogeneity | p. 99 |
Administrative and judicial methods for securing homogeneity | p. 102 |
The conclusions: is there a future for enhanced multilateralism and bilateralism? | p. 108 |
On the European Union's institutional capacity to cope with further enlargement | p. 111 |
Introduction | p. 111 |
Absorption, enlargement and integration capacity | p. 112 |
In search of the limits of the institutional framework | p. 116 |
Democratic legitimacy | p. 117 |
Efficiency | p. 120 |
In search of sustainable solutions | p. 123 |
Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe - an adequate response? | p. 123 |
Towards an 'enlargement-proof' institutional structure? | p. 127 |
Conclusion | p. 129 |
A flexible future for the European Union: the way forward or a way out? | p. 133 |
Introduction | p. 133 |
Supranationality versus disintegration? | p. 134 |
Different forms of flexibility in EU law and policy | p. 136 |
Constitutional flexibility: enhanced cooperation and voluntary withdrawal | p. 137 |
Differentiation through international agreements | p. 140 |
Extending participation in EU law and policy for EU members | p. 140 |
Extending participation in EU law and policy to non-EU members | p. 142 |
Differentiation through accession treaties | p. 146 |
Excluding participation in EU law and policy for EU members | p. 146 |
Constitutional principles limiting exclusion? | p. 150 |
Flexibility in an enlarging Union: the way forward of a way out? | p. 154 |
Conclusion | p. 155 |
Widen to deepen? The potential and limits of accession treaties to achieve EU constitutional reform | p. 157 |
Introduction | p. 157 |
Can widening serve as a vehicle for deepening? | p. 158 |
The role of accession treaties in bringing about institutional reform | p. 160 |
Legal potential | p. 160 |
Advantages in introducing reforms through accession treaties | p. 161 |
Practice | p. 162 |
Limits to the introduction of institutional reforms through accession treaties | p. 163 |
Role of the court | p. 164 |
Conclusion | p. 165 |
Keynote speech | p. 167 |
Introduction | p. 167 |
General remarks | p. 168 |
Deepening | p. 169 |
New solutions | p. 170 |
The judicial system | p. 172 |
Conclusion | p. 172 |
Report of the discussions during the colloquium | p. 175 |
Deepening | p. 175 |
Widening | p. 177 |
Reconciling deepening and widening | p. 179 |
List of contributors | p. 185 |
Index | p. 187 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.