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9780199264094

Executive Power in the European Union Law, Practice, and Constitutionalism

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  • ISBN13:

    9780199264094

  • ISBN10:

    0199264090

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2009-11-09
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

The picture of Brussels-based bureaucrats exercising wide-ranging, arbitrary executive powers with no accountability is one of the favorite images conjured by Eurosceptics across the political spectrum. What truth is there in the image? This book aims to bring the EU's executive powers out of the shadows by mapping the evolution and current form of the EU's various executive actors, their powers, and the mechanisms for holding them accountable. In doing so it provides a rich understanding of the way in which the EU's institutional and legal framework fits within national constitutional presumptions about how power should be controlled and accountability achieved. Covering both the political executive and the administrative executive at the EU institutional level, the book analyzes their relationship with national executive power, and traces the historical evolution of executive order in Europe from the Peace of Westphalia through classic inter-governmental organizations to the allegedly unique EU framework. The book's analysis covers both the formal legal structure of the Union and the evolution of the EU's living institutions in practice. The picture presented is of a fragmented, cluttered and complex European executive space, resistant to radical constitutional reform and in need of a more nuanced understanding of the different forms of executive power required by different political aims and modes of decision-making.

Author Biography


Deirdre Curtin is Professor of International and European Governance at the Utrecht School of Governance, University of Utrecht and Professor of European Law at the University of Amsterdam (since 2008). Previously she held the Chair of the Law of International Organisations at the Law Faculty in Utrecht (1992-2002) She is a member of the Royal Dutch Academy for Science (KNAW) and in 2007 was awarded the Spinoza Prize by the Dutch Academy of Science for "outstanding contribution to the development and promotion of international and European law and for her groundbreaking visions concerning the governance of international organisations such as the European Union." She has written extensively on issues relating to the constitutional and institutional development of the European Union and since 2003 has led a Research Group of political scientists and lawyers on "Enhancing Democracy in the EU" within the EU financed Network of Excellence, CONNEX.

Table of Contents

List of Tables and Figuresp. xvi
Abbreviationsp. xvii
Table of Casesp. xx
Table of Legislationp. xxii
Table of Treaties and Conventionsp. xxvi
Topography And Layered Sediments
Geology of the European Unionp. 3
The Unseen and Many Layersp. 3
The Evolving EUp. 5
The Metaphor of 'Sedimentation'p. 8
The Living Constitutionp. 10
Dark Matterp. 11
A 'Big Bang' Constitution?p. 13
The Phoenix Arisesp. 16
Mapping the Existing Literaturep. 18
Out of the Shadowp. 20
The Book's Missionp. 22
Structure of this Bookp. 25
Externalizing National Executive Powerp. 28
Locating Executive Powerp. 28
Executive Power External to the Statep. 29
The European Union as an International Organizationp. 32
Vertical Delegation of Powersp. 35
Complementarity of Politics and Administrationp. 37
The EU as an Evolving 'Political System'p. 40
Horizontal Delegation of Powersp. 44
Beyond the Visiblep. 46
Balancing Executive Powerp. 48
The Impetuous 'Vortex' of Powerp. 48
The Separation of Powersp. 49
A Residual Approach to Executive Powerp. 51
Checks and Balancesp. 54
The Balancing of Executive Powerp. 58
The Council of Ministers and the European Councilp. 58
The Commissionp. 61
Composite Executive Powerp. 65
Tides of Eu Reform
Political Executive Powerp. 69
The Political Topp. 69
The 'European Council': The 'Queen Bee' Directs and Controlsp. 72
A hive of activityp. 72
President of the European Councilp. 76
The 'Council of Ministers': An Institutional 'Chameleon'p. 81
Institutional'chameleon'p. 81
The 'presidency': A composite carouselp. 83
Legislative and executive tasks: Blurring boundariesp. 85
COREPER, Council, high-level committees, and working parriesp. 87
The European Commission: A 'normalized' executivep. 91
The core executivep. 91
The president (and the commissioners)p. 92
Number of commissionersp. 95
A normalized executivep. 98
Double-hatted 'Minister for Foreign Affairs'p. 100
EU Plate Tectonicsp. 103
Administrative Executive Powerp. 105
Tides of 'Eurocrats'p. 105
The EU Administrative Executivep. 106
'Core' Eurocratsp. 106
Seconded national expertsp. 107
National civil servants and (scientific) expertsp. 109
Executive Rule-making and Autonomyp. 113
The Commission's evolution as an autonomous actorp. 113
The evolving role of the Commission Secretariat Generalp. 114
The Commission and rule-making with comitology committeesp. 117
The Commission and 'delegated legislation' post-Lisbonp. 121
Executive tasks and the Council General Secretariat's internal structuresp. 125
Integration by Stealth?p. 134
Satellite Executive Powerp. 135
The Unseen Handsp. 135
The 'Independent' European Bankp. 136
The Commission Sheds Layersp. 140
Delegation to private actorsp. 140
Internal delegation to executive agenciesp. 143
The Commission and the 'auxiliary'agenciesp. 144
Institutionalization of (Quasi-)Independent 'Agencies'p. 146
The internal acceleration of agency constructionp. 146
The European Parliament struggles for voicep. 150
EU agencies on a leash?p. 155
Internal agencies with external powersp. 158
What's in a name? 'European regulatory agencies'p. 160
Powers of European regulatory agenciesp. 163
Full speed aheadp. 165
Satellite Networks of Actorsp. 166
Shared administration with 'double-hatted' national partnersp. 166
EU networks of actorsp. 169
The Shadow of Hierarchyp. 172
A Living EU Constitution
Unitary Executive Powerp. 177
Framing the Living Executivep. 177
The Court of Justice Uncovers Normative Unityp. 179
Depolarization through judicial reviewp. 179
The evolving nature of EU legal instrumentsp. 184
The Court of Justice as Constitutional Geologistp. 187
Judicial tunnelsp. 187
Defending internal constitutionalism from external challengesp. 194
Internal and External Autonomyp. 201
Transparent Executive Powerp. 204
Lifting the Veil of Secrecyp. 204
Conceptualizing the EU Principle of 'Transparency': Legal constitutionalismp. 205
The veil of secrecyp. 205
The general legal principle of reasoned administrationp. 206
Proactive litigants and courtsp. 209
Union legislation consolidatesp. 210
The legal-constitutional approachp. 213
Comparing apples and orangesp. 215
Operationalizing the EU Principle of 'Transparency': Institutional politicsp. 218
The role of the Internetp. 218
Digital registers and core executive institutionsp. 220
Commission register(s) of documents disappointsp. 222
Council register evolvesp. 228
The Inter-institutional Strategyp. 233
Inter-institutional dialoguep. 233
European Parliament and the European Central Bankp. 235
Shifting Fault Linesp. 237
Open meetings of the Council of Ministersp. 237
Closed 'trialogue' meetings with the European Parliamentp. 239
Information in EU databasesp. 241
Authoritarian Temptationp. 244
Accountable Executive Powerp. 246
Conceptualizing Accountabilityp. 246
Understanding 'Public Accountability' in the EU Political Systemp. 248
'Control' ex antep. 248
'Public accountability' exposep. 252
The Provision of Informationp. 256
Debate and Deliberationp. 258
Public deliberationp. 258
The European Parliament deliberatesp. 260
The role of the courtsp. 265
The role of the Court of Auditors and the Ombudsmanp. 270
Sanction and/or Consequencesp. 271
An Organizing Principle, not a Meta-normp. 274
Making Visible the Invisiblep. 277
The 'Invisible' Constitutionp. 277
Dark Matter: Invisible layersp. 279
Inter-institutional Engineeringp. 281
Executive Power and Fostering 'Legitimacy'p. 283
Formal and social legitimacyp. 283
Input and output legitimacyp. 285
Throughput legitimacyp. 287
From participation to proceduresp. 289
EU Executive Power and Alleviating the 'Democratic Deficit'p. 291
The 'democratic deficit'p. 291
Policy without politics?p. 292
Politics without policy?p. 294
From Active Responsibility to Active Accountabilityp. 298
The End of the Beginningp. 300
Bibliographyp. 305
Indexp. 339
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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