Towards a stable finalité with federal features? The balancing acts of the Constitutional Treaty for Europe
By: FOLLESDAL, Andreas.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Philadelphia, PA : Routledge, 2005Subject(s): Constitutional Treaty | Direitos Humanos | Democracia | Forma de Estado | Legitimidade | Partido Político | Ciência Política | SocializaçãoJournal of European Public Policy 12, 3, p. 572 - 589 Abstract: The Constitutional Treaty for Europe (CTE) strengthens federal features of the future European political order, and makes the federal tradition of political thought more salient. Stable and legitimate federal political orders require multiple forms of balancing, and many of the changes in the CTE are improvements on the Nice Treaty in these aspects. The CTE goes some way toward creating a European political order with federal features more likely to both merit and facilitate trust and trustworthiness among Europeans. Central features are the increased role of human rights, national parliaments, the European Parliament, and political parties, all operating under greater transparency. The gains in trust and trustworthiness may be worth some apparent efficiency losses in promotion of the European interest. Such trust is crucial if the institutions are to foster willing support and dual loyalty toward the individual's member state and toward the union as a whole among the citizenry and officials.The Constitutional Treaty for Europe (CTE) strengthens federal features of the future European political order, and makes the federal tradition of political thought more salient. Stable and legitimate federal political orders require multiple forms of balancing, and many of the changes in the CTE are improvements on the Nice Treaty in these aspects. The CTE goes some way toward creating a European political order with federal features more likely to both merit and facilitate trust and trustworthiness among Europeans. Central features are the increased role of human rights, national parliaments, the European Parliament, and political parties, all operating under greater transparency. The gains in trust and trustworthiness may be worth some apparent efficiency losses in promotion of the European interest. Such trust is crucial if the institutions are to foster willing support and dual loyalty toward the individual's member state and toward the union as a whole among the citizenry and officials.
There are no comments for this item.