| Reviews |
| - '... a book that one would expect to find in any serious public and European law library.' - Legal Studies
- 'Written by an impressive range of international lawyers ... innovative networking style ... will interest practitioners and scholars in European Law and a possible European Union constitution.' - KnowEurope
|
| Description | | - Offers a systematic discussion of the changes that have taken place in a large number of policy areas related to the management of the internal market
- Discusses legal issues in the light of changes in the policy process, and presents legal and social theory perspectives on EU governance
- Brings together academics from a variety of legal disciplines and legal cultures
- Will publish at a time when the EU is engaged in an important debate to define its aims and the way it operates
| | Classical views of European integration have been shaken by the evolution of the past decade. It has become clear that the traditional division of tasks between the European Union and its Member States, and between the various European institutions no longer provides a valid description of European policy-making. As the EU has become a major actor in the field of risk regulation, new
institutional and other actors such as scientific experts and transnational bureaucratic networks increasingly play a major role. This book considers the underlying forces that have brought about such change and critically analyzes the responses of the European institutions. Various contributions explore the constitutional and the administrative law dimensions of the developing European market
governance, and they consider the changes which have occurred from the perspective of both legal and social theory. |
Readership: Scholars and students of EU law and functions; practitioners in the field; political scientists.
| Contents |
I. Editorial
1.
The Law's Problems with the Governance of the European Market
,
Christian Joerges
II. European Constitutional Law
2.
Institutional Balance as a Guarantee for Democracy in EU Governance
,
Koen Lenaerts and Amaryllis Verhoeven
3.
Institutional Balance as Interest Representation. Some Reflections on Lenaerts and Verhoeven
,
Stijn Smismans
4.
Delegation is Dead - Long Live Delegation: Managing the Democratic Disconnect in the European Market Polity
,
Peter Lindseth
III. The Law of European Governance
5.
European Harmonisation of Administrative Law and/or The Law of a Europeanised Administration
,
Stefan Kadelbach
6.
Misfits: EU Law and the Evolution of European Governance
,
Renaud Dehousse
7.
Judges and EU Administrative Governance
,
Loic Azoulay
8.
The Socially Embedded Market Polity and Administrative Proceduralism
,
Michelle Everson
9.
Administering Europe in an Age of Uncertainty: The Precautionary Principle in Community Law
,
Joanne Scott & Ellen Vos
IV. Good Governance and Democratic Theory
10.
Directly-Deliberative Polyarchy: An Institutional Ideal for Europe?
,
Oliver Gerstenberg and Charles F. Sabel
|
| Authors, editors,
and contributors | Christian Joerges, Professor of European Economic Law, European University Institute, Florence and Renaud Dehousse, Jean Monnet Professor of Law, Institut d'études politiques, Paris
| Contributors:Christian Joerges, Professor of European Economic Law, European University Institute, Florence Koen Lenaerts, Director of the Institute for European Law, University of Leuven, and the current Belgian Judge at the Court of First Instance of the European Communities in Luxembourg University of Leuven Amaryllis Verhoeven, Research Fellow, Institute for European Law, Leuven Stijn
Smismans, Researcher, Department of Law, European University Institute, Florence Peter Lindseth, Associate Professor of Law, University of Conneticut Stefan Kadelbach, Professor of European Community Law, University of Munster Renaud Dehousse, Professor of EU Law at the Institut d'Etudes politiques de Paris, Director of Sciences Po's European Centre, and Research Director at Notre Europe
Loic Azoulay, Department of Law, University of St Etienne Michelle Everson, Jean Monnet Lecturer in European Law at Birkbeck College, University of London Joanne Scott, Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge Ellen Vos, Lecturer in European Law, University of Maastricht |
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