Power and legitimacy : reconciling Europe and the nation-state / Peter L. Lindseth.
2010
KJE5602 .L56 2010 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Power and legitimacy : reconciling Europe and the nation-state / Peter L. Lindseth.
Published
Oxford ; New York, N.Y. : Oxford University Press, [2010]
Copyright
©2010
Call Number
KJE5602 .L56 2010
ISBN
9780195390148 (hbk. : alk. paper)
0195390148 (hbk. : alk. paper)
0195390148 (hbk. : alk. paper)
Description
xxii, 339 pages ; 25 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)607986721
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-316) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Preliminary Note on the Euro Crisis
xi
Preface
xiii
Citation Forms
xix
Abbreviations
xxi
Introduction Reconciling Europe and the Nation-State in Law and History
1
Representative Government, Democratic Legitimacy, and "Europe"
4
Administrative Governance and the Distinction between Control and Legitimation of Regulatory Power
14
National Legitimation and the Administrative Character of European Governance
23
ch. One
Situating the Argument: Legal History, Institutional Change, and Integration Theory
33
1.1.
Administrative Governance as an Alternative Analytical Framework
33
1.2.
Delegation as a Normative-Legal Principle
44
1.3.
The Importance of National Antecedents
57
ch. Two
The Interwar Crisis and the Postwar Constitutional Settlement of Administrative Governance
61
2.1.
The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy and Lessons Learned
62
2.2.
Elements of the Postwar Constitutional Settlement
74
Delegation and the Legislative Function Redefined
75
Technocracy and the Leadership of the National Executive
81
Courts as Commitment Mechanisms: Collective Democracy and Individual Rights
85
2.3.
Mediated Legitimacy and the Conditions for Constitutional Stability in the Two Postwar Eras
88
ch. Three
Supranational Delegation and National Executive Leadership since the 1950s
91
3.1.
A New Deal for Europe?: Technocratic Autonomy, the Treaty of Paris, and the Need for a National Executive Role
95
3.2.
Toward National Executive Control?: Negotiating the Treaty of Rome
107
3.3.
From Control to Oversight: the Luxembourg Compromise, the European Council, and Beyond
120
ch. Four
Supranational Delegation and National Judicial Review since the 1960s
133
4.1.
The European Court of Justice and Judicially Sanctioned Spillover
137
4.2.
Defining National Judicial Deference to Supranational Delegation from the 1960s to the 1980s
152
4.3.
Defining the Limits of Strong Deference: Kompetenz-Kompetenz in the Constitutional Politics and Jurisprudence of the Last Two Decades
166
ch. Five
Supranational Delegation and National Parliamentary Scrutiny since the 1970s
189
5.1.
The Pivotal Change: Subsidiarity and the Expansion of Supranational Regulatory Power After 1986
191
5.2.
The Institutionalization of National Parliamentary Scrutiny under National Law since the 1970s
202
5.3.
Toward a Polycentric Constitutional Settlement: National Parliaments and Subsidiarity under Supranational Law in the 2000s
225
Conclusion The Challenge of Legitimizing Europeanized Administrative Governance
251
Beyond Delegation?: Density, Democracy, and Polycentric Constitutionalism in the European Union
256
Legitimation and Control Revisited: Toward and European Conflicts Tribunal?
266
Sovereignty, the Nation-State, and Integration History
277
References
283
Table of Cases
317
Index
325