Constitutionalism and the Enlargement of Europe

Date
Lundi 21 janvier 2013
Débute à 16:00
Prix
Entrée libre
Contact
Jean Frederic Koné
Site Web
Lieu
A-3464
3101, chemin de la tour
Montréal, QC Canada
H3T 1J7

514 343-6111
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Constitutionalism and the Enlargement of Europe

Invité par la professeure Nanette Neuwahl, Wojciech Sadurski, Professeur en Jurisprudence et titulaire de la chaire Challis à l'Université de Sydney, vient au CRDP pour présenter son dernier ouvrage, Constitutionalism and the Enlargement of Europe.

Résumé de l'ouvrage :

After the fall of Communism in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), the newly democratized countries of this region joined two main pan-European political and legal structures: the Council of Europe and the European Union. This book shows how the Eastward enlargement of these two structures fostered the 'constitutionalization' both of the Council of Europe and of the EU.

Prompted by the enlargement of the Council of Europe and the admission of a number of countries which brought unique and often more substantial problems onto the Court's agenda, the main judicial body of the Council of Europe, the European Court of Human Rights, became a quasi 'constitutional court' of Europe. This book demonstrates that this was primarily as a result of the widening of its agenda and the resulting need to make activist decisions about the compatibility of national laws with the European Convention.

In terms of the EU, the book shows that the enlargement (first prospective, and then, actual) has been an important agenda-setter for the constitutionalization of the EU; in particular, for openly placing the issue of fundamental rights on the EU agenda as a legitimate and indispensable matter of concern for the EU. But the 'constitutional synergies' were a two-way street: the accession to both pan-European structures has also affected the development of democratic constitutionalism in CEE states. It has raised difficult issues regarding the relationships between national sovereignty, democracy, and human rights that CEE policy makers have grappled with; these issues and responses by CEE member states have had implications for the 'old' EU member states as well. These dynamics are explored through various case studies, providing a new perspective on the development of legal norms and institutions within European supranational bodies.

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