Table of Contents for The European Union

The European Union
A Polity of States and Peoples
Walter van Gerven

Preface

Abbreviations

Introduction

1.The European Union's Institutions, Identity, and Values

I. THE EUROPEAN UNION IN A NUTSHELL

Three Pillars under One Roof

EU Institutions and Their Competences under the Three Pillars

a) The first pillar

b) The second and third pillars

c) The Union as a whole

d) The Court of Justice

Differences in Levels of Integration: A Europe "à la Carte

II. A EUROPEAN "BODY POLITIC" AND IDENTITY

The European Union: A Political Entity or a State

a) The Union is not a state

b) The Union: A "body politic" in search of democracy

c) "Nation-state": A concept inadequate to define the Union's polity

European Public Space and Public Opinion

a) Is there a European public space

b) European identity in historical perspective

c) European identity now and in the future

III. EUROPEAN CONSTITUTIONALISM

European Union Values and Objectives

Typically European Values and Objectives

2.Accountable Government

I. ACCOUNTABILITY OF EXECUTIVE GOVERNMENT

Comparing Executive Accountability Regimes

Learning Accountability from Scandals

a) Open government in Sweden—at the expense of responsible journalism

b) Criminal prosecution in France—playing it rough

c) Tribunals of Inquiry in the U.K.—playing it softly

d) Ministerial responsibility in Germany—in accordance with the rules of the Basic Law

e) Ministerial accountability for civil servants—Primacy of politics in the Netherlands and Belgium

II. POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY OF EU COMMISSIONERS

The Content of Accountability and Political Responsibility

a) The principle of accountability and political responsibility in Community law

b) Commissioners' accountability and political responsibility for civil servants

c) Learning from the Member States

d) Accountability under the second and third pillars

The Special Case of Administrative Agencies

a) Regulatory agencies

b) Executive or implementing agencies

III. CONCLUSIONS

3.The Rule of Law

I. RULE OF LAW, RECHTSSTAAT, AND JUDICIAL REVIEW

II. SUBMISSION OF PUBLIC AUTHORITIES TO COMMUNITY LAW

Judicial Review by Community and National Courts

a) Judicial review by Community courts

b) Judicial review by national courts in cooperation with Community courts

The Community Governed by the Rule of Law, but Not (Yet) the Whole Union

III. RESPECT FOR BASIC RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS

Protection of Basic Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in the

European Union

Protection of Basic Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in the United States

Judicial Scrutiny in Concrete Cases

IV. PROVIDING LEGAL CERTAINTY

The Need for a Clear Legal Basis

a) The principles of conferral, subsidiarity, and proportionality

b) Community jurisdiction regarding interstate trade, in comparison with the United States interstate commerce clause

c) Legal basis, legal certainty, and judicial activism

High-Quality Legislation

V. CONCLUSIONS

4.Good Governance

I. INTEGRITY AND EFFICIENCY

Encouraging Ethical Behavior

Ensuring Efficiency and Effectiveness

a) "Input" and "output" legitimacy of the budgetary and accounting process

b) New modes of governance

II. EQUALITY IN LAW AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION

Equal Protection in the European Union and the United States

Affirmative Action Correcting Race and Gender Discrimination

III. SOCIAL JUSTICE AND THE WELFARE STATE

A Citizenship of Lonely Rights Bearers

Different Conceptions of the Welfare State

a) Health care in the United States and the European Union

b) The impact of EU internal market freedoms on Member State health care systems

The Union's Social Policy and Social Citizenship

a) Community supportive action in the sphere of social policy: Social exclusion as an example

b) From market citizenship to political and social citizenship, 200 c) From citizen to resident rights

IV. CONCLUSIONS

5.Open Government

I. CIVIC RESPONSIBILITY

Republicanism Correcting Individualism

Five Conceptions of Responsibility in Complex Organizations

The Civic Dimension of Whistle-blowing

a) Whistle-blowing (and civil disobedience) in the European Union and in the United States

b) Dealing with whistle-blowing properly

II. FREE ACCESS TO PUBLIC DOCUMENTS

Conflicting Views on How Much Free Access

Freedom of Information in the United States

III. C IVIL SOCIETY, PUBLIC OPINION, AND CITIZEN PARTICIPATION

The Importance of Civil and Civic Society

Citizen Access to the Political Process

a) Elections and political parties in the EU

b) Citizen access through other means

A Vibrant Public Opinion on European Integration

IV. FREEDOM OF THE PRESS: A MARKETPLACE FOR IDEAS

a) Freedom of the press under the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR

b) Freedom of the press in the United States

c) Comparing ECtHR case law with case law of the U.S. Supreme Court

V. CONCLUSIONS

6.Making a Constitution for Europe

I. CONSTITUTION MAKING IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

a) The proceedings of the Convention

b) Name and contents of the draft Constitution

c) Recent developments

II. COMPETENCES AND PROCEDURES IN THE DRAFT

constitution

The Union on a Continuum between Intergovernmentalism and

Supranationalism

Distribution of Power in the Draft Constitution

a) Principles governing the exercise of competences

b) Categories of competences and policies

c) No major changes but some unanswered questions

d) Conclusion

Legal Instruments, Legislative Procedures, and Voting Requirements

a) Legal instruments defined

b) Legislative procedures

c) Qualified majority voting

d) Conclusion

III. THE INSTITUTIONS' DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY

The Union's Single Institutional Framework

a) Substantive functions and balance of power

b) Democratic legitimacy and the rule of law

c) Conclusion

Some Controversial Solutions

a) A dual presidency

b) The composition of the Council of Ministers

c) The Union's foreign minister

IV. ISSUES STILL IN NEED OF A SATISFACTORY SOLUTION

The Union's Finances

The Procedure for Amending the Constitutional Treaty

V. CONCLUSIONS

7.Which Form of Government for Europe

I. FORMS OF GOVERNMENT: A COMPARATIVE OVERVIEW

The British Parliamentary and American Presidential Systems

The French and German Variants of Presidential and Parliamentary

Systems

II. PURE AND MIXED FORMS OF PRESIDENTIAL AND PARLIAMENTARY GOVERNMENT: AN ASSESSMENT

Presidentialism versus Parliamentarism

a) "The Failure of Presidential Democracy

b) The transformation of "pure" parliamentarism into a mixed form of government

Majoritarian versus Consensus Democracies; Plurality versus

Proportional Electoral Systems

a) Majoritarian versus consensus democracies

b) Plurality versus proportional electoral systems

III. TWO SPECIFIC ISSUES: BICAMERALISM AND POLITICAL PARTIES

The Significance of Bicameralism

a) Bicameralism from a European Union perspective

b) Bicameralism in a federal state: Germany

The Importance of Political Parties

a) The role of political parties in the Member States

b) Political parties in the European Union

IV. A DEMOCRATIC FORM OF GOVERNMENT FOR THE EUROPEAN UNION

Not a Presidential but a Strong Parliamentary System

a) Neither a pure nor a semi-presidential system

b) A consensus democracy with a strong executive

c) The Union's democratic deficit

Improving the Commission's Accountability

Adapting the Role of Euro-Parties

a) Involving citizens

b) Strengthening party identities

c) Changing the focus of Euro-parties

d) Taking the risk of enhanced democratic legitimacy

XII CONTENTS

Constructing Accountability in the Council of Ministers

a) The Council: One of two parliamentary houses (or chambers

b) Striking balances in the common interest, 363 c) Securing accountability

Which Future for the European Council

V. CONCLUSIONS

Epilogue

Substantive Changes

a) Composition of the Commission and appointment of its president

b) Redefining qualified majority voting, and some other changes

The Search for a New President of the Commission and the Appointment of a New Commission

The Union in the Wider World

Index

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