Preface Introduction: Agenda and Structure of the Volume
PART I: LEGAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE 1. Introduction: The Contest of Disciplines in the Study of European Integration 2. Taking the Law Seriously: On Political Science and the Role of Law in the Process of European Integration 3. ‘Where the Law Runs Out’: The Overburdening of Law and Constitutional Adjudication by the Financial Crisis and Europe’s New Modes of Economic Governance 4. Conclusion – Part I PART II: INTEGRATION AND PRIVATE LAW 5. Introduction: Tensions and Affinities Between Private Law and European Market Integration 6. The Science of Private Law and the Nation State 7. The Impact of European Integration on Private Law: Reductionist Perceptions, True Conflicts and a New Constitutional Perspective 8. Private Law in Europe’s Political Economy after the Financial Crisis 9. Conclusion – Part II
PART III: SOCIAL REGULATION AND THE TURN TO GOVERNANCE 10. Introduction: The Integration Project in the Risk Society 11. Scientific Expertise in Social Regulation and the European Court of Justice: Legal Frameworks for De-nationalised Governance Structures 12. From Intergovernmental Bargaining to Deliberative Political Processes: The Constitutionalisation of Comitology 13. Integration through De-legalisation? 14. Conclusion – Part III
PART IV: THE EUROPEAN SOCIAL MODEL: A NEW TYPE OF ‘SOCIAL MARKET ECONOMY’ 15. Introduction: Problems with ‘Social Europe’ 16. Informal Politics, Formalised Law and the ‘Social Deficit’ of European Integration: Reflections after the Judgments of the ECJ in Viking and Laval 17. Will the Welfare State Survive European Integration? On the Exhaustion of the Legal Conceptualisations of the Integration Project from the Foundational Period and the Search for a New Paradigm 18. How is a Closer Union Conceivable under Conditions of Ever More Socio-Economic and Political Diversity? Constitutionalising Europe’s Unitas in Pluralitate 19. Conclusion – Part IV
PART V: THE CONTEST ON THE ECONOMIC CONSTITUTION 20. Introduction: ‘The Economic’ in European Legal Scholarship 21. The Market without the State? The ‘Economic Constitution’ of the European Community and the Rebirth of Regulatory Politics 22. What is Left of the European Economic Constitution? A Melancholic Eulogy 23. Europe’s Economic Constitution in Crisis and the Emergence of a New Constitutional Constellation 24. Conclusion – Part V
PART VI: CONFLICTS LAW AS EUROPE’S CONSTITUTIONAL FORM 25. Introduction: Semantics and Concepts 26. United in Diversity as Europe’s Vocation and Conflicts Law as Europe’s Constitutional Form 27. The Idea of a Three-Dimensional Conflicts Law as Constitutional Form 28. A Conflicts-Law Response to the Precarious Legitimacy of Transnational Trade Governance 29. Conclusion – Part VI
PART VII: VERGANGENHEITSCHULD (GUILT ABOUT THE PAST) AND THE DUTY TO REMEMBER 30. ‘Darker Legacies of Law in Europe’ – Problems with a Research Project 31. Continuities and Discontinuities in German Legal Thought 32. Europe a Großraum? Shifting Legal Conceptualisations of the Integration Project 33. Working through ‘Bitter Experiences’ towards a Purified European Identity? A Critique of the Disregard for History in European Constitutional Theory and Practice 34. Conclusion – Part VII
Epilogue: Europe’s Crisis and Vocation Index
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Conflict and transformation : essays on European law and policy 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
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In this important compendium, one of the leading scholars of EU law and its legal framework, reflects on his previous writings in the context of current challenges the European project is facing. More than a simple restatement, it offers an important theoretical comment at this defining time for EU law. The author offers a welcome counterbalance to what some perceive to be a surfeit of optimism when assessing the EU and its development. In so doing, Professor Joerges identifies three flaws in the current European ideology. Firstly, he points to the intellectual weakness of the "integration through law" ideology. Secondly, the book sets out the systematic neglect of "the economic" and its political dynamics. Finally, it addresses the complacency with respect to Europe's darker legacies. This is an important critical (and candid) assessment of Europe at its half century.