Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

From Rome to Lisbon: "Executive Federalism" in the (New) European Union

Schütze, Robert

From Rome to Lisbon: "Executive Federalism" in the (New) European Union Thumbnail


Authors



Abstract

Is the European Union a legislative giant on clay feet? Is it true that the Union has, with some specific exceptions, no original competence to implement European law? This article analyses the structure of the Union’s “executive federalism” in three steps. After a comparative constitutional section on the centralized (American) and decentralized (German) enforcement systems of federal norms, the constitutional foundations of executive power in the European Union are explored. Will Article 291 TFEU provide a reformed textual base for the (new) Union’s executive powers? A third section then examines existing constitutional limits to the national (decentralized) and European (centralized) enforcement of European law. Beginning with the decentralized implementation mechanism, a first part of this section looks at the substantive, procedural and morphological limits on the national implementation of Union law. A second part of that section changes perspective as it investigates the constitutional limits on the executive powers of the Union in the form of, for example, the principle of subsidiarity. An excursus briefly analyses the phenomenon of “mixed administration” through a federal lens. And a conclusion finally argues that the Lisbon Treaty will remedy, to some extent, the lack of clear constitutional foundation of Union executive power.

Citation

Schütze, R. (2010). From Rome to Lisbon: "Executive Federalism" in the (New) European Union. Common Market Law Review, 47(5), 1385-1427

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2010
Deposit Date Aug 21, 2010
Publicly Available Date Oct 19, 2016
Journal Common Market Law Review
Print ISSN 0165-0750
Publisher Kluwer Law International
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 47
Issue 5
Pages 1385-1427
Publisher URL http://www.kluwerlawonline.com/abstract.php?area=Journals&id=COLA2010059

Files

Published Journal Article (183 Kb)
PDF

Copyright Statement
Reprinted from Common market law review, 47(5), 2010, 3485-1427 with permission of Kluwer Law International.





You might also like



Downloadable Citations