
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Speaker: Dr Bernadette Zelger, University of Innsbruck
Abstract: The debate about the future of the European Union has long left academic circles, arrived in the midst of society and been awarded political attention. Meanwhile, there has been an increase of Euroscepticism accompanied by more nationalist political developments echoed in the swings to the right all across the EU. These developments may, arguably at least in parts, be explained by social resentments of the peoples of Europe. While acknowledging that law constructs and contributes to a social reality of its own it is thus, arguably also about the lack of a genuine socio-economic equilibrium within the law and political system of the EU. This imbalance is not only found within the EU legal constitutional framework, but also within the case-law of the European Court of Justice. However, possible solutions to solve this socio-economic imbalance are limited: It is either (i) Treaty reform or, alternatively, (ii) a change in the approach of the Court in its jurisprudence. While these alternatives are both valid and, to some extent, mutually exclusive, they unveil and epitomise different visions as regards the future of the European Union. However, while acknowledging the differences in the approach, they are arguably different means to serve the very same end: Warrant the European Union’s future success.
For more information see:
https://www.cels.law.cam.ac.uk/weekly-seminar-series
3.4
55 ratings
Speaker: Dr Bernadette Zelger, University of Innsbruck
Abstract: The debate about the future of the European Union has long left academic circles, arrived in the midst of society and been awarded political attention. Meanwhile, there has been an increase of Euroscepticism accompanied by more nationalist political developments echoed in the swings to the right all across the EU. These developments may, arguably at least in parts, be explained by social resentments of the peoples of Europe. While acknowledging that law constructs and contributes to a social reality of its own it is thus, arguably also about the lack of a genuine socio-economic equilibrium within the law and political system of the EU. This imbalance is not only found within the EU legal constitutional framework, but also within the case-law of the European Court of Justice. However, possible solutions to solve this socio-economic imbalance are limited: It is either (i) Treaty reform or, alternatively, (ii) a change in the approach of the Court in its jurisprudence. While these alternatives are both valid and, to some extent, mutually exclusive, they unveil and epitomise different visions as regards the future of the European Union. However, while acknowledging the differences in the approach, they are arguably different means to serve the very same end: Warrant the European Union’s future success.
For more information see:
https://www.cels.law.cam.ac.uk/weekly-seminar-series
294 Listeners
5,433 Listeners
2,117 Listeners
22 Listeners
1,542 Listeners
21 Listeners
18 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
5 Listeners
12 Listeners
17 Listeners
1 Listeners
2 Listeners
9 Listeners
142 Listeners
3,181 Listeners
2,381 Listeners
862 Listeners
320 Listeners
199 Listeners
2,234 Listeners
7 Listeners
952 Listeners