Politicisation and integration through law: whither integration theory?
In: West European politics, Band 39, Heft 5, S. 933-952
ISSN: 1743-9655
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In: West European politics, Band 39, Heft 5, S. 933-952
ISSN: 1743-9655
In: West European politics, Band 39, Heft 5, S. 933-952
ISSN: 0140-2382
World Affairs Online
In: INTEGRATION THROUGH LAW REVISITED: THE MAKING OF THE EUROPEAN POLITY, D. Augenstein, ed., Ashgate, 2011
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Working paper
In: INTEGRATION THROUGH LAW REVISITED: THE MAKING OF THE EUROPEAN POLITY, D. Augenstein, ed., Ashgate, 2011
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In: International affairs, Band 63, Heft 4, S. 677-678
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: Edinburgh/Glasgow law and society series
This volume provides a valuable reference for scholars in the field of European integration studies and European legal and political theory. The contributors revisit one of the first academic projects to conceptualise and study European legal integration - the early 'Integration through Law' School. On this basis, they consider continuities and discontinuities in the underlying social and political landscape which the law is to integrate (the 'object' of integration), the forms and capacities of the law itself (the 'agent' of integration), and the way these two dimensions reflect on each other.
In: Edinburgh/Glasgow law and society series
In: Revue française de science politique, Band 63, Heft 1, S. 115-116
ISSN: 0035-2950
This article tracks the genesis of one of the EU's most established meta-narratives, that of Europeanization-through-case-law. Instead of studying this theory of European integration as an explanatory frame, I consider it here as the phenomenon to be explained and accounted for. Thereby, the paper does not try to assess how heuristic and explicative it may be, but rather analyzes what is at stake in its genesis as a dominant theory of Europeanization. I trace its emergence in the conflicting theorizations of the relationship between Law and the European Communities that come along with the European Court of Justice's 'landmark' decisions (Van Gend en Loos and Costa v. ENEL). This approach helps seizing the genesis of a specific and - at the time - rather unlikely political model for Europe in which a judge (the ECJ) is regarded as the very locus of European integration's dynamics as well as the best mediator and moderator of both Member States' "conservatism" and individuals' "potential excesses". It also allows to grasp the emergence of Euro-implicated lawyers as a group endowed with a set of critical functions (integration) and missions (protecting the EC treaties) the theory assigned them.
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In: EUI Working Paper No. RSCAS 2008/10
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In: Forthcoming in the Global Community Yearbook of International Law and Jurisprudence 2020 (2021).
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In: iCourts Working Paper Series No. 87
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In: Journal of European integration: Revue d'intégration européenne, Band 36, Heft 6, S. 549-566
ISSN: 1477-2280
In: Journal of European integration, Band 36, Heft 6, S. 549-566
ISSN: 0703-6337
World Affairs Online