Hardback
Between Flexibility and Disintegration
The Trajectory of Differentiation in EU Law
9781783475889 Edward Elgar Publishing
Differentiation was at first not perceived as a threat to the European project, but rather as a tool to promote further integration. Today, more EU policies than ever are marked by concentric circles of integration and a lack of uniform application. As the EU faces increasingly existential challenges, this timely book considers whether the proliferation of mechanisms of flexibility has contributed to this newly fragile state or whether, to the contrary, differentiation has been fundamental to integration despite the heterogeneity of national interests and priorities.
More Information
Contributors
Contents
More Information
Differentiation was at first not perceived as a threat to the European project, but rather as a tool to promote further integration. Today, more EU policies than ever are marked by concentric circles of integration and a lack of uniform application. As the EU faces increasingly existential challenges, this timely book considers whether the proliferation of mechanisms of flexibility has contributed to this newly fragile state or whether, to the contrary, differentiation has been fundamental to integration despite the heterogeneity of national interests and priorities.
Written by emerging and established experts in the field, the chapters examine the present and future of differentiation in EU law. Part I covers general institutional aspects, with contributors examining the nature and characteristics of the various institutional and extra-institutional forms of differentiation. Part II takes a policy-oriented perspective, focussing on areas of EU law and policy in which differentiated integration is prevalent or particularly intriguing. This includes Economic and Monetary Union, the internal market, justice and home affairs, and foreign policy.
Differentiated integration is now a defining feature of the EU polity, with the potential to impact almost every facet of EU regulation. This book will be essential reading for students and academics in EU law or anyone interested in the future of EU integration.
Written by emerging and established experts in the field, the chapters examine the present and future of differentiation in EU law. Part I covers general institutional aspects, with contributors examining the nature and characteristics of the various institutional and extra-institutional forms of differentiation. Part II takes a policy-oriented perspective, focussing on areas of EU law and policy in which differentiated integration is prevalent or particularly intriguing. This includes Economic and Monetary Union, the internal market, justice and home affairs, and foreign policy.
Differentiated integration is now a defining feature of the EU polity, with the potential to impact almost every facet of EU regulation. This book will be essential reading for students and academics in EU law or anyone interested in the future of EU integration.
Contributors
Contributors: V. Borger, D. Curtin, M. Dawson, M. de Visser, B. De Witte, A. Durana, N. El-Enany, C. Fasone, E. Ferran, E. Herlin-Karnell, C. Herrmann, S. Kingston, P. Koutrakos, A. Ott, S. Peers, D. Thym, P. Van Cleynenbreugel, S. Van den Bogaert, A.P. van der Mei, E. Vos, M. Weimer
Contents
Contents
Introduction
Bruno De Witte, Andrea Ott and Ellen Vos
Part I: Institutional Dimension
1. Variable Geometry and Differentiation as Structural Features of the EU Legal Order
Bruno De Witte
2. Competing Models for Understanding Differentiated Integration
Daniel Thym
3. Enhanced Cooperation: The Cinderella of Differentiated Integration
Steve Peers
4. Modes of Flexibility: Framework Legislation v ‘Soft’ Law
Mark Dawson and Alieza Durana
5. Differentiated Representation: Is a Flexible European Parliament Desirable?
Deirdre Curtin and Cristina Fasone
6. Differentiation through Accession Law: Free Movement Rights in an Enlarged European Union
Andrea Ott
7. Flexibility and Differentiation: A Plea for Allowing National Differentiation in the Fundamental Rights Domain
Maartje de Visser and Anne Pieter van der Mei
Part II: Policy-specific Aspects
8. Differentiated Integration in EMU
Stefaan Van den Bogaert and Vestert Borger
9. Differentiated Integration in the Field of Economic and Monetary Policy and the Use of “(Semi-)Extra” Union Legal Instruments – The Case for “Inter Se Treaty Amendments”
Christoph Herrmann
10. European Banking Union and the EU Single Financial market: More Differentiated Integration, or Disintegration?
Eilís Ferran
11. The Financial Transaction Tax Project
Pieter Van Cleyenbreugel and Wouter Devroe
12. Differentiated Integration or Uniform Regime? National Derogations from EU Internal Market Measures
Ellen Vos and Maria Weimer
13. Flexibility in EU Environmental Law and Policy: A Response to Complexity, or Fig Leaf for Expediency?
Suzanne Kingston
14. The Perils of Differentiated Integration in the Field of Asylum
Nadine El-Enany
15. Between Flexibility and Disintegration in EU Criminal Law
Ester Herlin-Karnell
16. Foreign Policy between Opt-outs and Closer Cooperation
Panos Koutrakos
Index
Introduction
Bruno De Witte, Andrea Ott and Ellen Vos
Part I: Institutional Dimension
1. Variable Geometry and Differentiation as Structural Features of the EU Legal Order
Bruno De Witte
2. Competing Models for Understanding Differentiated Integration
Daniel Thym
3. Enhanced Cooperation: The Cinderella of Differentiated Integration
Steve Peers
4. Modes of Flexibility: Framework Legislation v ‘Soft’ Law
Mark Dawson and Alieza Durana
5. Differentiated Representation: Is a Flexible European Parliament Desirable?
Deirdre Curtin and Cristina Fasone
6. Differentiation through Accession Law: Free Movement Rights in an Enlarged European Union
Andrea Ott
7. Flexibility and Differentiation: A Plea for Allowing National Differentiation in the Fundamental Rights Domain
Maartje de Visser and Anne Pieter van der Mei
Part II: Policy-specific Aspects
8. Differentiated Integration in EMU
Stefaan Van den Bogaert and Vestert Borger
9. Differentiated Integration in the Field of Economic and Monetary Policy and the Use of “(Semi-)Extra” Union Legal Instruments – The Case for “Inter Se Treaty Amendments”
Christoph Herrmann
10. European Banking Union and the EU Single Financial market: More Differentiated Integration, or Disintegration?
Eilís Ferran
11. The Financial Transaction Tax Project
Pieter Van Cleyenbreugel and Wouter Devroe
12. Differentiated Integration or Uniform Regime? National Derogations from EU Internal Market Measures
Ellen Vos and Maria Weimer
13. Flexibility in EU Environmental Law and Policy: A Response to Complexity, or Fig Leaf for Expediency?
Suzanne Kingston
14. The Perils of Differentiated Integration in the Field of Asylum
Nadine El-Enany
15. Between Flexibility and Disintegration in EU Criminal Law
Ester Herlin-Karnell
16. Foreign Policy between Opt-outs and Closer Cooperation
Panos Koutrakos
Index