The Rise and Fall of the European Constitution
Richard Ekins editor NW Barber editor Maria Cahill editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:10th Jan '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This collection brings together some of the leading EU constitutional scholars to comment, with the benefit of hindsight, on the significance of the rejection of the Constitutional Treaty and how it impacted on post 2003 developments.
The Draft European Constitution was arguably both an attempt to constitutionalise the Union, re-framing that project in the language of the state, and an attempt to stretch the boundaries of constitutionalism itself, re-imagining that concept to accommodate the sui generis European Union. The (partial) failure of this project is the subject of this collection of essays. The collection brings together leading EU constitutional scholars to consider, with the benefit of hindsight, the purportedly constitutional character of the proposed Constitutional Treaty, the reasons for its rejection by voters in France and the Netherlands, the ongoing implications of this episode for the European project, and the lessons it teaches us about what constitutionalism really means.
[T]his “ripe” collection of recollections and reflections on the most essential and controversial issues that let the EU’s constitutional moment be bygone presents an inspiring, critical and yet affirmative account on the rise and resurgence of the European Constitution. -- Andriy Tyushka, College of Europe * Journal of Common Market Studies *
[W]orthwhile reading not only by EU law and political science scholars, but also by a broader public. -- Jacques Ziller * Common Market Law Review *
ISBN: 9781509910984
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 504g
248 pages