
Informal Decision Making in the European Community under the Luxembourg Compromise : The Law That Never Was
Bajon, Philip
Forventes utgitt: 16.10.2025
Leveringstid: 3-10 dager
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This book analyses the informal decision making process in the EU against the background of a gradually emerging European legal order. Based on extensive multi-archival research in the UK, France, Germany, the Benelux countries and in Community institutions, the book explores the resistance against majority rule under the so-called Luxembourg Compromise of 1966, a European 'soft law' that allowed Member States to invoke 'vital national interests' and to veto legislation. This 'gentlemen's agreement' was never sanctioned or codified. However, as a 'rule of the game' it had a significant impact on the operations of the EU for several decades and became an integral part of the EU's 'consensus' approach. Its underlying rationale is still alive in the present-day EU. Presenting a deeply revisionist account of European law and politics, the book demonstrates how the Luxembourg arrangement served as a compromise between the Treaty text and political reality, as a counterweight to technocratic ideas, and as a bridge between irreconcilable divides over European unification. It includes case studies from 1965 - 2000, such as the 'Eurosclerosis' of the 1970s, British exceptionalism as an EU member, the European revival of the mid-1980s, and intergovernmentalism on the verge of negotiating the Maastricht Treaty. Highly original in its interdisciplinary, comprehensive and archivally-rooted method, the book interrogates the most important and controversial debates about the past, present and future of the European Union.
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ISBN/Varenr:
9781509982851
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Språk:
Engelsk
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Forlag:
Hart Publishing
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Innbinding:
Innbundet
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Fagtema:
Jus
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Litteraturtype:
Faglitteratur
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Sider:
448
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Høyde:
23.4 cm
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Bredde:
15.6 cm