Product details
- Categories: Court of Justice of the EU
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780198717775
- Publication Date: 25/01/2018
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 320
- Language: English
Summary
The European Court of Justice is one of the most important actors in the
process of European integration. Political science still struggles to
understand its significance, with recent scholarship emphasizing how
closely rulings reflect member states' preferences. This book argues
that the implications of the supremacy and direct effect of the EU
Treaty have still been overlooked. As it constitutionalizes an
intergovernmental treaty, the European Union has a detailed set of
policies inscribed into its constitution that are extensively shaped by
the Court's case law. If rulings have constitutional status, their
impact will be considerable, even if the Court only occasionally diverts
from member states' preferences.
By focusing on the four
freedoms of goods, services, persons, and capital, as well as
citizenship rights, the book analyses how the Court's development of
case law has ascribed a broad meaning to these freedoms. The
constitutional status of this case law constrains policymaking at the
European and member-state levels. Different case studies show how major
pieces of EU legislation partly codify case law. Judicialization is
important in the EU. It also directly constrains member-state policies.
Court rulings oriented towards individual disputes are difficult to
translate into general policies-but if they have constitutional status
they have to go through this process. Policy options are thereby
withdrawn from majoritarian decision-making. As the Court cannot be
overruled, short of a Treaty change, its case law casts a long shadow
over policymaking in the European Union, undermining the legitimacy of
this political order.