Repozitorijum Pravnog fakulteta Univerziteta u Beogradu
Univerzitet u Beogradu - Pravni fakultet
    • English
    • Српски
    • Српски (Serbia)
  • Srpski (latinica) 
    • Engleski
    • Srpski (ćirilica)
    • Srpski (latinica)
  • Prijava
Pregled zapisa 
  •   RALF
  • Pravni fakultet / Faculty of Law University of Belgrade
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
  • Pregled zapisa
  •   RALF
  • Pravni fakultet / Faculty of Law University of Belgrade
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
  • Pregled zapisa
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Sovereignty ' Out, Constitutional Identity ' In: The 'Core Areas' of Controversy of EU Membership

Thumbnail
2015
Preuzimanje 🢃
862.pdf (526.3Kb)
Autori
Jovanović, M.
Konferencijski prilog (Objavljena verzija)
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentu
Apstrakt
The Lisbon Treaty has sparked a new round of debate about the nature of membership in the European Union. Constitutional courts of Germany and the Czech Republic played a prominent role in this debate. Parts of their rulings were framed in the traditional vocabulary of 'sovereignty'. In this paper, I proceed by showing heuristic limitations of the concept of 'sovereignty' in addressing the intricate issue of the EU membership. I will, first, argue that none of the aspects of sovereignty ' neither international, nor domestic ' is significantly affected by the membership in the Union. Moreover, the sovereignty lenses necessarily put emphasis on the question of the final authority, which legal pluralists rightly reject as misleading in the EU context. This rejection is a result of a genuine "heterarchical" relation between the EU and Member States. As a consequence, the EU membership can be more adequately reconstructed through the constitutional identity lenses. This is what both constit...utional courts to a certain extent did in their Lisbon rulings. The German court, in addition, tried to determine the "core areas" of competences beyond which the constitutional identity of Germany as a member state can be compromised within the EU. In the last part of the paper, I will challenge this course of action by demonstrating that it is problematic on a number of accounts. In this respect, the Czech Constitutional Court's (hereinafter: CCC) approach of refraining from determining in advance and in abstracto what might be the ultimate defining elements of the Czech constitutional identity seems to be more commendable.

Izvor:
Acta Juridica Hungarica, 2015, 56, 4, 249-267

DOI: 10.1556/026.2015.56.4.2

ISSN: 1216-2574

Scopus: 2-s2.0-84954176338
[ Google Scholar ]
1
URI
https://ralf.ius.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/865
Kolekcije
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institucija/grupa
Pravni fakultet / Faculty of Law University of Belgrade
TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović, M.
PY  - 2015
UR  - https://ralf.ius.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/865
AB  - The Lisbon Treaty has sparked a new round of debate about the nature of membership in the European Union. Constitutional courts of Germany and the Czech Republic played a prominent role in this debate. Parts of their rulings were framed in the traditional vocabulary of 'sovereignty'. In this paper, I proceed by showing heuristic limitations of the concept of 'sovereignty' in addressing the intricate issue of the EU membership. I will, first, argue that none of the aspects of sovereignty ' neither international, nor domestic ' is significantly affected by the membership in the Union. Moreover, the sovereignty lenses necessarily put emphasis on the question of the final authority, which legal pluralists rightly reject as misleading in the EU context. This rejection is a result of a genuine "heterarchical" relation between the EU and Member States. As a consequence, the EU membership can be more adequately reconstructed through the constitutional identity lenses. This is what both constitutional courts to a certain extent did in their Lisbon rulings. The German court, in addition, tried to determine the "core areas" of competences beyond which the constitutional identity of Germany as a member state can be compromised within the EU. In the last part of the paper, I will challenge this course of action by demonstrating that it is problematic on a number of accounts. In this respect, the Czech Constitutional Court's (hereinafter: CCC) approach of refraining from determining in advance and in abstracto what might be the ultimate defining elements of the Czech constitutional identity seems to be more commendable.
C3  - Acta Juridica Hungarica
T1  - Sovereignty ' Out, Constitutional Identity ' In: The 'Core Areas' of Controversy of EU Membership
EP  - 267
IS  - 4
SP  - 249
VL  - 56
DO  - 10.1556/026.2015.56.4.2
UR  - conv_3327
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović, M.",
year = "2015",
abstract = "The Lisbon Treaty has sparked a new round of debate about the nature of membership in the European Union. Constitutional courts of Germany and the Czech Republic played a prominent role in this debate. Parts of their rulings were framed in the traditional vocabulary of 'sovereignty'. In this paper, I proceed by showing heuristic limitations of the concept of 'sovereignty' in addressing the intricate issue of the EU membership. I will, first, argue that none of the aspects of sovereignty ' neither international, nor domestic ' is significantly affected by the membership in the Union. Moreover, the sovereignty lenses necessarily put emphasis on the question of the final authority, which legal pluralists rightly reject as misleading in the EU context. This rejection is a result of a genuine "heterarchical" relation between the EU and Member States. As a consequence, the EU membership can be more adequately reconstructed through the constitutional identity lenses. This is what both constitutional courts to a certain extent did in their Lisbon rulings. The German court, in addition, tried to determine the "core areas" of competences beyond which the constitutional identity of Germany as a member state can be compromised within the EU. In the last part of the paper, I will challenge this course of action by demonstrating that it is problematic on a number of accounts. In this respect, the Czech Constitutional Court's (hereinafter: CCC) approach of refraining from determining in advance and in abstracto what might be the ultimate defining elements of the Czech constitutional identity seems to be more commendable.",
journal = "Acta Juridica Hungarica",
title = "Sovereignty ' Out, Constitutional Identity ' In: The 'Core Areas' of Controversy of EU Membership",
pages = "267-249",
number = "4",
volume = "56",
doi = "10.1556/026.2015.56.4.2",
url = "conv_3327"
}
Jovanović, M.. (2015). Sovereignty ' Out, Constitutional Identity ' In: The 'Core Areas' of Controversy of EU Membership. in Acta Juridica Hungarica, 56(4), 249-267.
https://doi.org/10.1556/026.2015.56.4.2
conv_3327
Jovanović M. Sovereignty ' Out, Constitutional Identity ' In: The 'Core Areas' of Controversy of EU Membership. in Acta Juridica Hungarica. 2015;56(4):249-267.
doi:10.1556/026.2015.56.4.2
conv_3327 .
Jovanović, M., "Sovereignty ' Out, Constitutional Identity ' In: The 'Core Areas' of Controversy of EU Membership" in Acta Juridica Hungarica, 56, no. 4 (2015):249-267,
https://doi.org/10.1556/026.2015.56.4.2 .,
conv_3327 .

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
O repozitorijumu RALF | Pošaljite zapažanja

EU_logoOpenAIRERCUB
 

 

Kompletan repozitorijumGrupeAutoriNasloviTemeOva institucijaAutoriNasloviTeme

Statistika

Pregled statistika

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
O repozitorijumu RALF | Pošaljite zapažanja

EU_logoOpenAIRERCUB