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In this collection of essays, originally presented at the Academy of European Law in Florence, the changing landscape of the EU's legal acts is explored. Further to this, the changing boundaries between legal acts and processes which may create norms but do not create 'law' in the traditional sense are analysed.
This landscape is presented in two ways. Firstly, by focusing on the transformations and challenges to the EU's traditional legal acts, in particular since the reconfiguration of the categories of legal acts and the procedures for which they are adopted by the Lisbon Treaty. Secondly, the collection focuses on those acts found at (or beyond) the margin of classic EU legal acts, including acts of Member States such as inter se treaties; self-regulation and collective agreements; so-called soft law; and decision-making outside the normal legislative procedures.
The volume endeavours to explain the adaptability of the EU legal order despite the fact that the legal instruments at the Union's disposal have not fundamentally changed since the Treaty of Rome came into force 60 years ago. It explores the challenges that new decisional procedures and variations in the legal quality of EU acts pose for the EU's legal order, including alterations to institutional balance and the roles of the different institutional actors and challenges to the rule of law.
List of contents
- Introduction
- 1: Deirdre Curtin: Legal Acts and the Challenges of Democratic Accountability
- 2: Päivi Leino: The Politics of Efficient Compromise in the Adoption of EU Legal Acts
- 3: Claire Kilpatrick: Abnormal Sources and Institutional Actions in the EU Sovereign Debt Crisis: ECB Crisis Management and the Sovereign Debt Loans
- 4: Mark Dawson: New Governance in the EU after the Euro Crisis: Retired or Reborn?
- 5: Aukje A.H. van Hoek: The Social Dialogue as a Source of EU Legal Acts - Past Performance and Future Perspectives
- 6: Bruno De Witte and Thibault Martinelli: Treaties between EU Member States as Quasi-Instruments of EU Law
- 7: Alan Dashwood: EU Acts and Member State Acts in the Negotiation, Conclusion and Implementation of International Agreements
About the author
Marise Cremona,
European University Institute, Claire Kilpatrick,
European University Institute
Summary
This volume explores the changing landscape of the EU's legal acts, focusing on the transformations and challenges to the EU's traditional legal acts, as well as those acts found at the margin of such traditional EU acts. The volume further explains the adaptability of the EU legal order, as well as the challenges facing it.
Report
This collection contains work of exceptional quality. I have no doubt that it will become a standard point of reference for scholars in the years to come. Pavlos Eleftheriadis, Common Market Law Review