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The debate on law, governance and constitutionalism beyond the
state is confronted with new challenges. In the EU, confidence in
democratic transnational governance has been shaken by the
authoritarian and unsocial practices of crisis management. The
ambition of this book, which builds upon many years of close
co-operation between its contributors, is to promote a viable
interdisciplinary alternative to these developments. "Conflicts-law
constitutionalism" is a concept of transnational governance which
derives democratic legitimacy from the supranational control of the
external impact of national decision-making, on the one hand, and
the co-operative responses to problem interdependencies on the
other. The first section of the book contrasts Europe's new modes
of economic governance and crisis management with the
conditionality of international investments, and reflects upon the
communalities and differences between emergency Europe and global
exceptionalism. Subsequent sections substantiate the problematique
of executive and technocratic rule, explore conflict constellations
of prime importance in the fields of environmental and labour law,
and discuss the impact and limits of liberalisation strategies.
Throughout the book, European and transnational developments are
compared and evaluated.
This 2005 book argues that Europeanization and globalization have
led to ever-more intensive legalization at transnational level.
What accounts for compliance beyond the nation-state? The authors
tackle this question by comparing compliance with regulations that
have been formulated in a very similar way at different levels of
governance. They test compliance with rules at the national level,
at the regional level (EU), and at a global level (WTO), finding
that in fact the EU has higher levels of compliance than both
international and national rules. The authors argue that this is
because the EU has a higher level of legalization, combined with
effective monitoring mechanisms and sanctions. In this respect it
seems that the European Union has indeed achieved a high level of
legalization and compliance, though the authors add that this
achievement does not settle the related queries with the legitimacy
of transnational governance and law.
The term transnational governance designates untraditional types of
international and regional collaboration among both public and
private actors. These legally-structured or less formal
arrangements link economic, scientific and technological spheres
with political and legal processes. They are challenging the type
of governance which constitutional states were supposed to
represent and ensure. They also provoke old questions: Who bears
the responsibility for governance without a government? Can
accountability be ensured? The term 'constitutionalism' is still
widely identified with statal form of democratic governance. The
book refers to this term as a yardstick to which then contributors
feel committed even where they plead for a reconceptualisation of
constitutionalism or a discussion of its functional equivalents.
'Transnational governance' is neither public nor private, nor
purely international, supranational nor totally denationalised. It
is neither arbitrary nor accidental that we present our inquiries
into this phenomenon in the series of International Studies on
Private Law Theory.
The patterns and impact of globalization have become a common
concern of all international jurists, sociologists, political
scientists, and philosophers. Many have observed the erosion of the
powers of nation states and the emergence of new transnational
governance regimes, and seek to understand their internal dynamics,
re-regulatory potential, and normative quality. Karl Polanyi's
seminal book - The Great Transformation - is attracting new
attention to such endeavors, mirroring a growing sensitivity to the
social and economic risks of dis-embedding politics. Their
re-construction by Polanyi - including his warning against a
commodification of labor, land, and money - provide the
trans-disciplinary reference point for the contributions to this
book. Political economy, political theory, sociology, and political
science inform this discussion of Polanyi's insights in the age of
globalization. Further theoretical essays and case studies look at
his 'false commodities': money, labor (and services), and land (and
the environment). Jurists have hardly ever discussed Polanyi, and
the law has not been taken very seriously among 'Polanyians.' It is
nevertheless clear that economic stability and social protection
are simply inconceivable without the visible hand of law. The legal
discussion in this book's concluding chapters do not, and cannot,
depart directly from such premises. The framework of their analyses
is, instead, informed by current debates on the emergence of
para-legal regimes, the fragmentation of international law, and the
prospects of constitutional perspectives within which the rule of
law and the notion of law-mediated legitimate governance are
established. Polanyi's notion of the co-originality of
dis-embedding moves and re-imbedding countermoves can, however, be
usefully employed in the re-construction of the sociological
background of the moves and tensions which jurists discern.
In this important compendium, one of the leading scholars of EU law
and its legal framework, reflects on his previous writings in the
context of current challenges the European project is facing. More
than a simple restatement, it offers an important theoretical
comment at this defining time for EU law. The author offers a
welcome counterbalance to what some perceive to be a surfeit of
optimism when assessing the EU and its development. In so doing,
Professor Joerges identifies three flaws in the current European
ideology. Firstly, he points to the intellectual weakness of the
"integration through law" ideology. Secondly, the book sets out the
systematic neglect of "the economic" and its political dynamics.
Finally, it addresses the complacency with respect to Europe's
darker legacies. This is an important critical (and candid)
assessment of Europe at its half century.
The legal scholarship of the National Socialist and Fascist period
of the 20th century and its subsequent reverberation throughout
European law and legal tradition has recently become the focus of
intense scholarly discussion. This volume presents
theoretical,historical and legal inquiries into the legacy of
National Socialism and Fascism written by a group of the leading
scholars in this field. Their essays are wide-ranging, covering the
reception of National Socialist and Fascist ideologies into legal
scholarship; contemporary perceptions of Nazi Law in the
Anglo-American world; parallels and differences among authoritarian
regimes in the Third Reich, Austria, Italy, Spain, and
Vichy-France; how formerly authoritarian countries have dealt with
their legal antecedents; continuities and discontinuities in legal
thought in private law, public law, labour law, international and
European law; and the legal profession's endogenous obedience and
the pains of Vergangenheitsbewaltigung. The majority of the
contributions were first presented at a conference at the EUI in
the autumn of 2000, the others in subsequent series of seminars.
Ordoliberalism is a theoretical and cultural tradition of
significant societal and political impact in post-war Germany. For
a long time the theory was only known outside Germany by a handful
of experts, but ordoliberalism has now moved centre stage after the
advent of the financial crisis, and has become widely perceived as
the ideational source of Germany's crisis politics. In this
collection, the contributors engage in a multi-faceted exploration
of the conceptual history of ordoliberalism, the premises of its
founding fathers in law and economics, its religious underpinnings,
the debates over its theoretical assumptions and political
commitments, and its formative vision of societal ordering based
upon a synthesis of economic theories and legal concepts. The
renewal of that vision through the ordoliberal conceptualisation of
the European integration project, the challenges of the current
European crisis, and the divergent perceptions of ordoliberalism
within Germany and by its northern and southern EU neighbours, are
a common concern of all these endeavours. They unfold
interdisciplinary affinities and misunderstandings, cultural
predispositions and prejudices, and political preferences and
cleavages. By examining European traditions through the lens of
ordoliberalism, the book illustrates the diversity of European
economic cultures, and the difficulty of transnational political
exchanges, in a time of European crisis.
To many, the rejections of the Constitutional Treaty by Dutch and
French voters in 2005 came as a shock. However, given the many
tensions and the many unresolved issues it was quite unsurprising.
The challenges facing the Constitutional debate go to the core of
the European integration process as they have to do with the terms
on which to establish a post-national political order. This book
deals with four themes which make up the main sources of the
'constitutional crisis': The problem of the rule of law in a
context of governance beyond the nation state The problem of the
social deficit of the Union The problem of identity and collective
memories The problem of institutionalizing post-national democracy.
These themes constitute the unfinished agenda of the European
integration process. Law, Democracy and Solidarity in a
Post-national Union is based on the efforts of a collection of top
scholars in the fields of Law, Political Science, Sociology and
Economics, and will appeal to students and scholars of political
science, the European Union and European studies.
This is a book about the ever more complex legal networks of
transnational economic governance structures and their legitimacy
problems. It takes up the challenge of the editors' earlier
pioneering works which have called for more cross-sectoral and
interdisciplinary analyses by scholars of international law,
European and international economic law, private international law,
international relations theory and social philosophy to examine the
interdependences of multilevel governance in transnational
economic, social, environmental and legal relations. Two
complementary strands of theorising are expounded. One argues that
globalisation and the universal recognition of human rights are
transforming the intergovernmental "society of states" into a
cosmopolitan community of citizens which requires more effective
constitutional safeguards for protecting human rights and consumer
welfare in the national and international governance and legal
regulation of international trade. The second emphasises the
dependence of the functioning of international markets and liberal
trade on governance arrangements which respond credibly to safety
and environmental concerns of consumers, traders, political and
non-governmental actors. Enquiries into the generation of
international standards and empirical analyses of legalization and
judizialisation practices form part of this agenda. The
perspectives and conclusions of the more than 20 contributors from
Europe and North-America cannot be uniform. But they converge in
their search for a constitutional architecture which limits,
empowers and legitimises multilevel trade governance, as well as in
their common premise that respect for human rights, private and
democratic self-government and social justice require more
transparent, participatory and deliberative forms of transnational
"cosmopolitan democracy".
To many, the rejections of the Constitutional Treaty by Dutch and
French voters in 2005 came as a shock. However, given the many
tensions and the many unresolved issues it was quite unsurprising.
The challenges facing the Constitutional debate go to the core of
the European integration process as they have to do with the terms
on which to establish a post-national political order. This book
deals with four themes which make up the main sources of the
'constitutional crisis': The problem of the rule of law in a
context of governance beyond the nation state The problem of the
social deficit of the Union The problem of identity and collective
memories The problem of institutionalizing post-national democracy.
These themes constitute the unfinished agenda of the European
integration process. Law, Democracy and Solidarity in a
Post-national Union is based on the efforts of a collection of top
scholars in the fields of Law, Political Science, Sociology and
Economics, and will appeal to students and scholars of political
science, the European Union and European studies.
The debate about so-called economic globalization has reached a new
phase. The hegemony of neo-liberal thinking has ended, in the face
of both the increased and increasingly effective resistance to the
social consequences of neo-liberal market-making - rising
inequality and insecurity throughout the world - and the visibly
dysfunctional effects of lack of regulation - currency and stock
market crashes, among others. Thus, the story about 'the rise and
fall of market society', which was first told in these terms by
Karl Polanyi sixty years ago, is about to receive a new chapter. In
this light, this volume offers a novel perspective on the
interaction between states and markets. In contrast to much of
current theoretical wisdom, we hold, with Polanyi, that markets
cannot even be consistently thought of as self-regulating. Markets
are always constituted by framework conditions that cannot be set
by the markets themselves. The range and scope of market rules
requires some agreement, or at least acceptance, for economic
exchange to be working at all; in democratic societies, these rules
are at least theoretically always subject to political debate and
decision. To put the issue in theoretical terms: even the most pure
version of economic liberalism always entails at the same time a
political philosophy. This volume, thus, proposes to understand
contemporary capitalism by regarding the economy as a polity, as an
arrangement that is always constituted by some collective
agreements about its mode of operation. Such theoretical position
on its own, though, is insufficient to explain the workings of
capitalism once and for all. Historical experiences with capitalism
have led to transformations that require new angles of analysis. It
is in the nature of the struggles over the embedding of markets
that their outcomes are subject to historical contingency and
cannot be completely known beforehand. Beyond a review of the
theoretical tools at hand, therefore, the analysis of the
contemporary constellation of capitalism, also requires an
understanding of its recent transformations. This is the second
task to which this volume is devoted - through analyses of the
current state of regulation of labour and money and through
investigations of the historical development and novel forms of the
mode of embedding markets. While focusing on the renewal of the
analysis of contemporary capitalism, the volume also points to
fruitful directions of institutional or policy change and provides
perspectives for a much-needed political renewal, with a particular
focus on the European Union as a novel polity embedding the
European economy.
Over the last decade, the EU has become a major actor in the field of risk regulation in crucial areas such as environmental and consumer protection. This book analyzes the reasons which have prompted this development, and discusses the ways in which the EU's structures and modes of market governance have changed and attempted to respond to such challenges.
This volume argues that the crisis of the European Union is not
merely a fiscal crisis but reveals and amplifies deeper flaws in
the structure of the EU itself. It is a multidimensional crisis of
the economic, legal and political cornerstones of European
integration and marks the end of the technocratic mode of
integration which has been dominant since the 1950s. The EU has a
weak political and administrative centre, relies excessively on
governance by law, is challenged by increasing heterogeneity and
displays increasingly interlocked levels of government. During the
crisis, it has become more and more asymmetrical and has intervened
massively in domestic economic and legal systems. A team of
economists, lawyers, philosophers and political scientists analyse
these deeper dimensions of the European crisis from a broader
theoretical perspective with a view towards contributing to a
better understanding and shaping the trajectory of the EU.
In the wake of the euro crisis, the European Union has been
transformed in many ways. Is it now on the right track? The euro
crisis, the steps taken to manage it, and the resulting
transformations have triggered a necessary process of reconsidering
economic governance in the European Union. This volume- the third
in a series of annual editions tackling different aspects of
governance- examines the long list of open political, legal, and
economic questions related to the functioning and fundamental
structure of the Union as a whole and the economic and monetary
union in particular. Organised in three main sections, the
contributions to this collection bring the perspectives of
different academic disciplines to bear on the functional aspects of
economic governance, the institutional transformations that have
taken place, and their implications for the Union's legitimacy. A
separate chapter looks at inequalities in perceptions of economic
conditions and well-being within the European Union to identify
trends particularly during the eurozone crisis. In doing so, the
chapters in this volume take stock of the current situation, shed
light on the dilemmas and challenges that must be recognised and
addressed, and explore various options for the way ahead. The
collection's ultimate goal is to assess whether the recent
transformations lead EU governance in the right direction or
require further adjustment.
This 2005 book argues that Europeanization and globalization have
led to ever-more intensive legalization at transnational level.
What accounts for compliance beyond the nation-state? The authors
tackle this question by comparing compliance with regulations that
have been formulated in a very similar way at different levels of
governance. They test compliance with rules at the national level,
at the regional level (EU), and at a global level (WTO), finding
that in fact the EU has higher levels of compliance than both
international and national rules. The authors argue that this is
because the EU has a higher level of legalization, combined with
effective monitoring mechanisms and sanctions. In this respect it
seems that the European Union has indeed achieved a high level of
legalization and compliance, though the authors add that this
achievement does not settle the related queries with the legitimacy
of transnational governance and law.
This volume argues that the crisis of the European Union is not
merely a fiscal crisis but reveals and amplifies deeper flaws in
the structure of the EU itself. It is a multidimensional crisis of
the economic, legal and political cornerstones of European
integration and marks the end of the technocratic mode of
integration which has been dominant since the 1950s. The EU has a
weak political and administrative centre, relies excessively on
governance by law, is challenged by increasing heterogeneity and
displays increasingly interlocked levels of government. During the
crisis, it has become more and more asymmetrical and has intervened
massively in domestic economic and legal systems. A team of
economists, lawyers, philosophers and political scientists analyse
these deeper dimensions of the European crisis from a broader
theoretical perspective with a view towards contributing to a
better understanding and shaping the trajectory of the EU.
Der Fortschritt der Integration und die Erweiterung der Union haben
das Projekt einer Verfassungsgebung fur Europa motiviert.
Unabhangig vom Schicksal des von den Staats- und Regierungschefs
i.J. 2004 verabschiedeten Verfassungsvertrages bleibt die Suche
nach einer konstitutionellen Form der Union auf der Tagesordnung
der Europapolitik. Die geschichtliche Bestimmtheit der europaischen
Integration und die sich aus ihr ergebenden Belastungen sind in
diesen Debatten kaum ausdrucklich thematisiert worden. Der Band
bringt die Gegenwart der Vergangenheit Europas in Beitragen von
Juristen, Historikern und Sozialwissenschaftlern zur Sprache.
Europa werde um die Auseinandersetzungen mit seiner Vergangenheit
nicht umhin kommen, lautet ein Leitmotiv der Beitrage. Diese
Prozesse und ihre Ambivalenzen sind kaum beherrschbar. Es kommt
umso mehr darauf an, Formen der Aufarbeitung der Vergangenheit zu
finden, in denen das europaische Projekt eine neue soziale
Akzeptanz gewinnt.
The debate on law, governance and constitutionalism beyond the
state is confronted with new challenges. In the EU, confidence in
democratic transnational governance has been shaken by the
authoritarian and unsocial practices of crisis management. The
ambition of this book, which builds upon many years of close
co-operation between its contributors, is to promote a viable
interdisciplinary alternative to these developments. "Conflicts-law
constitutionalism" is a concept of transnational governance which
derives democratic legitimacy from the supranational control of the
external impact of national decision-making, on the one hand, and
the co-operative responses to problem interdependencies on the
other. The first section of the book contrasts Europe's new modes
of economic governance and crisis management with the
conditionality of international investments, and reflects upon the
communalities and differences between emergency Europe and global
exceptionalism. Subsequent sections substantiate the problematique
of executive and technocratic rule, explore conflict constellations
of prime importance in the fields of environmental and labour law,
and discuss the impact and limits of liberalisation strategies.
Throughout the book, European and transnational developments are
compared and evaluated.
In this important compendium, one of the leading scholars of EU law
and its legal framework, reflects on his previous writings in the
context of current challenges the European project is facing. More
than a simple restatement, it offers an important theoretical
comment at this defining time for EU law. The author offers a
welcome counterbalance to what some perceive to be a surfeit of
optimism when assessing the EU and its development. In so doing,
Professor Joerges identifies three flaws in the current European
ideology. Firstly, he points to the intellectual weakness of the
“integration through law” ideology. Secondly, the book sets out
the systematic neglect of “the economic” and its political
dynamics. Finally, it addresses the complacency with respect to
Europe’s darker legacies. This is an important critical (and
candid) assessment of Europe at its half century.
Ordoliberalism is a theoretical and cultural tradition of
significant societal and political impact in post-war Germany. For
a long time the theory was only known outside Germany by a handful
of experts, but ordoliberalism has now moved centre stage after the
advent of the financial crisis, and has become widely perceived as
the ideational source of Germany's crisis politics. In this
collection, the contributors engage in a multi-faceted exploration
of the conceptual history of ordoliberalism, the premises of its
founding fathers in law and economics, its religious underpinnings,
the debates over its theoretical assumptions and political
commitments, and its formative vision of societal ordering based
upon a synthesis of economic theories and legal concepts. The
renewal of that vision through the ordoliberal conceptualisation of
the European integration project, the challenges of the current
European crisis, and the divergent perceptions of ordoliberalism
within Germany and by its northern and southern EU neighbours, are
a common concern of all these endeavours. They unfold
interdisciplinary affinities and misunderstandings, cultural
predispositions and prejudices, and political preferences and
cleavages. By examining European traditions through the lens of
ordoliberalism, the book illustrates the diversity of European
economic cultures, and the difficulty of transnational political
exchanges, in a time of European crisis.
This is a book about the ever more complex legal networks of
transnational economic governance structures and their legitimacy
problems. It takes up the challenge of the editors' earlier
pioneering works which have called for more cross-sectoral and
interdisciplinary analyses by scholars of international law,
European and international economic law, conflict of laws,
international relations theory and social philosophy to examine the
interdependences of multilevel governance in transnational
economic, social, environmental and legal relations. Two
complementary strands of theorising are expounded. One argues that
globalisation and the universal recognition of human rights are
transforming the intergovernmental 'society of states' into a
cosmopolitan community of citizens which requires more effective
constitutional safeguards for protecting human rights and consumer
welfare in the national and international governance and legal
regulation of international trade. The second emphasises the
dependence of the functioning of international markets and liberal
trade on governance arrangements that respond credibly to safety
and environmental concerns of consumers, traders, political and
non-governmental actors. Enquiries into the generation of
international standards and empirical analyses of legalisation and
judicialisation practices form part of this agenda. The
perspectives and conclusions of the more than 20 contributors from
Europe and North-America cannot be uniform. But they converge in
their search for a constitutional architecture which limits,
empowers and legitimises multilevel trade governance, as well as in
their common premise that respect for human rights, private and
democratic self-government and social justice require more
transparent, participatory and deliberative forms of transnational
'cosmopolitan democracy'. This second paperback edition replaces
Chapters 15 to 18 of the first edition published in 2006 by four
new chapters examining the alternative conceptions of
'International Economic Law' and 'Multilevel Governance' from
diverse public and private, national and international law
perspectives.
One of the striking features of the European Community's regulatory
regimes is the role assigned to committees at all stages of the
preparation of new measures and the implementation of its policies.
Despite their obvious importance in the European polity, the
'comitology' of the EC has been understudied and poorly understood.
This book fills a number of gaps in the literature by bringing
together legal, political and policy analysts to examine the
emergence of the committee role. For the European Parliament
comitology represents obstacles to its own participation in policy
making. For lawyers comitology is indicative of a strengthening of
the administrative branch of government which seems to be evading
parliamentary control and susceptibility to judicial review. These
are the issues discussed and analysed in this book of original
essays.
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