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"Decisive rejection by French and Dutch voters in 2005 forced the EU to abandon the Constitutional Treaty agreed the previous year. Yet by the end of the 2007, contrary to all expectations and after an intergovernmental conference essentially devoid of substantive negotiation, EU leaders had agreed and signed the Treaty of Lisbon containing the bulk of the Constitutional Treaty's substantive reforms. How did this latest treaty come about? Why did events move so quickly in 2007? Who were the key actors and what methods did they use to enable a treaty to be drawn up and agreed in such a short period of time? This book explores the unique process that saw EU leaders hastily agree a lengthy and detailed mandate for the intergovernmental conference. In doingsso, it highlights the pivotal roles played by the German Council Presidency and key institutional actors in paving the way for and securing agreement among EU leaders on the new treaty. "--
Inhaltsverzeichnis
List of Boxes Abbreviations Acknowledgements 1. The Treaty of Lisbon in Context 2. The Constitutional Treaty: Rejection and Reflection 3. The German Council Presidency I: Focal Points and Reverse Engineering 4. The German Council Presidency II: From Berlin Declaration to Road Map 5. The German Council Presidency III: From Road Map to Mandate 6. The IGC Mandate and the Draft Reform Treaty 7. The 2007 Intergovernmental Conference 8. Ratification and Implementation 9. The Treaty of Lisbon and the Future of EU Treaty Reform References Index
Bericht
'This fine-grained volume chronicles the complex processes leading to the Treaty of Lisbon. It provides an essential background to the continuing debate on EU treaty reform.'
Helen Wallace, European Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
'Phinnemore has produced what will undoubtedly be seen as the definite account of how the Lisbon Treaty has come about. The volume is a detailed and extremely valuable record of how the provisions in the treaty were negotiated, demonstrating the way in which various interests and particular circumstances have interacted in bringing about this important reform. Beyond this, Phinnemore identifies the lessons that can be drawn from the Lisbon experience and the more general patterns that explain the outcomes of treaty revision. This book ought to be standard reading for anyone seeking to understand the complex processes that underpin decision-making in the European Union.'
Thomas Christiansen, Department of Political Science, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands