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Full Description
The negotiation of new treaties, containing important institutional innovations and reforms, has been a constant challenge for the EU ever since the 1950s. When compared with the classic intergovernmental conferences, the Convention on the Future of Europe stands as a Copernican revolution that radically altered the method of treaty change. For the first time, Member States agreed to share their constituent power with representatives from the European institutions, as well as from the national parliaments. Adopting a multi-disciplinary approach merging history, political science and negotiation analysis, this book examines the origins of this new method, taking into account previous experiments of a constitutional nature such as the EPC, the Spinelli Draft Treaty and the convention that drafted the Charter of Fundamental Rights. It also analyses how this new method might have influenced the negotiating behaviour of government representatives. Using a case study approach in two specific policy areas that were negotiated at the European Convention - firstly, the reform of the EU's institutional architecture and secondly, the adoption of a legal personality and the simplification of the legal instruments - the author explores how the characteristics of the issues under negotiation influenced the dynamics in the Assembly and, specifically, the behaviour of representatives of the Member States.
Contents
Contents: Governmental actors' preferences and negotiation behaviour at the European Convention. The theoretical debate and the search for a toolbox - The Governments and the constitutional projects in the EU. From the EPC failure to the convocation of the European Convention - The structure and composition of the European Convention - The functioning of the European Convention. The executive organs and the rules of procedure - An empirical analysis of the governments' behaviour across different policy areas. The case of the legal personality and simplification - An empirical analysis of the governments' behaviour across two different policy areas. The reform of the EU institutional architecture.