The EU Constitution in Time of War - Legal Responses to Russia’s Aggression Against Ukraine
FABBRINI Federico
Product details
- Categories: Constitutional and Institutional Law, Geopolitics
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780198963486
- Publication Date: 26/02/2025
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 200
- Language: English
Summary
Russia's illegal aggression against Ukraine has been a watershed moment
for the European Union (EU). The return of large-scale conventional
warfare to the European continent, unseen since the Second World War,
shattered the illusion of perpetual peace and forced the EU to confront
the reality of hard power. Originally created to maintain internal
peace, the EU was never conceived to handle the challenges of war. Yet,
the war in Ukraine required the EU to repurpose its machinery of
government to do just that.
Embracing a comparative analytical
framework, this book examines how the EU constitution has functioned in
response to Russia's aggression. It scrutinizes the EU's legal reactions
across five key policy areas: foreign, security, and defence policy;
economic and fiscal policy; justice and home affairs; energy and
industrial policy; and enlargement and reform. In doing so, it
investigates whether the EU constitution has enabled the EU to respond
effectively to the war, how EU treaties have been interpreted to
authorize war-related actions, and whether these responses have adhered
to constitutional limits.
Advancing a threefold argument, this
book asserts that the EU constitution has demonstrated sufficient
flexibility to permit wartime actions. Secondly, it highlights the
limitations exposed by the return of conventional warfare in Europe,
noting structural constraints and governance shortcomings that hinder
decisive action, and instances where laws inadequately constrain EU
action, particularly regarding fundamental rights and the rule of law.
Finally, it evaluates the long-term constitutional implications of war
for EU governance and proposes legal reforms that could shape a more
perfect EU for both times of war and peace.
Table of contents
1:Introduction
2:To 'provide for the common defense': developments in foreign affairs and defence
3:To 'promote the general welfare': developments in fiscal and economic policy
4:To 'establish justice': developments in justice and home affairs
5:To 'insure domestic tranquility': developments in energy and industrial policy
6:To 'secure the blessings of liberty': developments in enlargement and reforms
7:Conclusion