Constitutional pluralism in the EU / Klemen Jaklic.
2014
KJE4445 .J35 2014 (Map It)
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Details
Title
Constitutional pluralism in the EU / Klemen Jaklic.
Published
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014.
Copyright
©2014
Call Number
KJE4445 .J35 2014
ISBN
9780198703228 (hbk.)
0198703228 (hbk.)
0198703228 (hbk.)
Description
xv, 357 pages ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)859181104
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 327-343) and index.
Record Appears in
Variant Title
Constitutional pluralism in the European Union
Table of Contents
Introduction
1
pt. I
MAPPING ANALYSIS
1.
MacCormick and the Idea of Pluralism
13
1.
Preliminary Clarifications
13
2.
The New Europe as a Challenge to Sovereignty
14
3.
The Alternative Approach Leading to Pluralism
17
4.
Towards Normative Pluralism
25
2.
Epistemic Pluralism
31
1.
Explaining the Theory
31
1.1.
The basic idea
31
1.2.
Two ways in which the axiom avoids external arbitration
34
1.3.
The case of Europe
37
1.4.
Explanatory and normative pluralism
40
1.5.
From second-order level to the first
42
2.
Situating the Theory
50
3.
Assessing the Theory
54
3.1.
In search of the rationale
54
3.2.
The theory's Eigenvalue
57
3.3.
Undercut and reoriented
60
3.
Substantive Pluralism
69
1.
Explaining the Theory
69
1.1.
The basics
69
1.2.
Explicating Weiler's heterarchy
74
1.3.
The building blocks
77
1.4.
Concluding the explication
89
2.
Situating the Theory
91
3.
Towards the Assessment
96
3.1.
The cluster of values
96
4.
Interpretive and Participative Pluralism
102
1.
Explaining the Theory
102
1.1.
Its basis and orientation
102
1.2.
Interpretive pluralism
103
1.3.
Participative pluralism
108
2.
Situating the Theory
114
3.
Towards the Assessment
119
5.
Institutional Pluralism
126
1.
Explaining the Theory
126
1.1.
The framework
126
1.2.
Who has the authority?
128
1.3.
Who has the final authority?
131
1.4.
Later developments
136
2.
Situating the Theory
147
3.
Assessing the Theory
149
3.1.
Fundamental rights
149
3.2.
Legislative jurisdictional boundaries
150
3.3.
Specific constitutional rules
155
pt. II
ASSESSMENT
6.
Decoding the Branch
161
1.
The Opening Finding
161
2.
Decoding the Branch
165
3.
Confirming the Map
173
3.1.
The theme of "how"
175
3.2.
The theme of "what"
177
3.3.
The theme of "who"
187
7.
A True Novelty
190
1.
Not Distinct from Monism?
191
1.1.
The line of criticism
191
1.2.
Response at the foundational level
193
1.3.
Response at the applicative level
196
2.
Fails to Respect Integrity?
200
2.1.
Not distinct
201
2.2.
The argument from integrity
205
2.3.
Other aspects
209
3.
Just Too Messy?
217
pt. III
THE SUPERIOR PATH
8.
Within the Branches of Pluralism
229
1.
Setting the Stage
231
2.
The Proceduralized Branches
235
2.1.
Closing off the area
235
2.2.
Blurring the distinction from monism
239
2.3.
Insufficient quality of respect?
245
3.
The Substantive Branches
251
3.1.
Into the opened area
251
3.2.
The foundational respect
256
3.3.
The foundational challenge
257
3.4.
Unreleased potential for democracy
259
9.
The Superior Conception of Pluralism
261
1.
Liberal Legitimacy and the Intact Respect
261
1.1.
Europe and democracy
261
1.2.
Rawls and liberal legitimacy
265
1.3.
The sound foundation
276
2.
The Sufficient Challenge
285
2.1.
Factual pluralism
286
2.2.
The globalizing age
288
2.3.
The normative incentives
289
10.
Democracy's Third Coming
295
1.
The Challenge from Europe
295
2.
Refining the Nation-State
300
3.
The Challenge Reversed: Refining Europe
313
4.
Full-Blown Substantive Pluralism
316
Bibliography
327
Index
345