What are the challenges facing the EU in its attempts to establish democratic institutional structures ?
Summary :
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Theorizing and achieving a model of democracy specific to the EU
- The current picture: The blatant inadequacy of both supranational and intergovernmental models
- The EU as a multi-level polity: conceptual and practical obstacles
- From an elitist and functionnally fragmentated polity to an inclusive political community
- The current picture: democratic legitimacy prevented by the 'cognitive deficit' and the unbalanced representation of societal interests
- The challenge: Towards an enhanced citizen's involvment and a 'European social contract'?
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
Abstract
"It is time to recognise that the Union has moved from a diplomatic to a democratic process, with policies that reach deep into national societies and daily life" . This statement by the European Commission subsumes ten years of political and academic on-going debate on the "democratic deficit" of the EU. The main trigger of this issue was the launch of political integration by Treaty of Maastricht. As a result, the democratisation of the Union has been at the centre of all Treaty changes in the nineteen ninentees, which accounted for the urgent need felt by both political leaders and EU bureaucrats for enhancing the legitimacy of the EU. The failure of the Constitution's ratification process shows how crucial it remains to identify the challenges facing the EU in its attempts to establish democratic institutional structures, if the former are to be addressed. This paper will argue that these challenges are related to the undertaken shift from an elitist structure based on Nation-States to a multi-level polity including all citizens. Since these two ideas are ideal-types situated at both ends of a spectrum, the position the EU holds or should hold varies along normative lines. institutional structures will be understood here in the (broad) constructivist sense, ie as all institutionalised processes that characterise the EU as a polity, including - next to institutions themselves - constitutionalised values, mecanisms for participation, decision-making processes, etc. Democracy will be defined as a mode of governance characterised by a set of procedures but also by substantive values , both aiming at guaranteeing the election by citizens of representatives on a pluralist basis, the respect of the rule of law, as well as the protection of the rights and freedoms of individuals and minorities. Dealing with challenges requires th consider three relevant topics: the current situation, the objectives pursued by the EU and the - both conceptual and practical - obstacles on the way. Thus, I will first examine the obstacles towards a multi-level system of governance specific to the EU. Then, I will go on the impediments to the shift from an elitist and functionally fragmented decision-making structure to a more inclusive political community.
See similar documents : European law
1
(Re)Constructing Afghanistan: After the Bonn agreement
Presentation | 01/15/2009 | en | .doc | 17 pages
2
The international intervention in Somalia 1992-1995
Presentation | 01/19/2009 | en | .doc | 31 pages
Latest in the category : European law
1
Implementation of European Law in a federal state: The Belgian case between coherence and autonomy
Case study | 01/15/2009 | en | .doc | 9 pages
2
What are the main differences between the civil and the common law systems ?
Presentation | 03/08/2007 | en | .doc | 5 pages
3
Principles and Practices of Consumer's Protection within the European Union
Presentation | 01/16/2007 | en | .doc | 19 pages
5
What are the challenges facing the EU in its attempts to establish democratic institutional structures ?
Presentation | 08/31/2006 | en | .doc | 7 pages
Change Currency
Our guarantee :
How it works?
Quality guaranteed
Refunds
Secure payment
Who are we ?
