The European Parliament and Delegated Legislation: An Institutional Balance Perspective
By (Author) Merijn Chamon
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
3rd November 2022
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
341.242224
Hardback
232
Width 169mm, Height 244mm
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbons promise to further parliamentarize the EUs functioning by looking into the Treaty-law framework governing the delegation of legislative power in the EU. In this field, the Lisbon Treaty formally greatly strengthened the position of the European Parliament vis--vis both the European Commission and the Council. The book explores whether Parliaments formally reinforced role is reflected in the actual balance of powers in the area of delegated legislation and executive rule-making. It does so by assessing how both the law and practice of decision-making at the legislative level, looking at specific case studies, and the sub-legislative level, examining the scrutiny over delegated legislation, has crystallized in the ten years following the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty. This rigorous study gives a fascinating insight into one of the most significant developments in European parliamentary law-making, which EU constitutional lawyers will find required reading.
The work of Merijn Chamon is a valuable study for anyone interested in EU law, since it offers both a descriptive account of the different types of acts [under the Lisbon Treaty] and their procedures, as well as offering a reflection on the challenges, problems and solutions which these new categories of acts may produce. (Bloomsbury Translation) -- Sylvain Thiery, Universit de Lille * Revue Trimestrielle de Droit Europen *
Merijn Chamon is Assistant Professor of EU Law at Maastricht University and Visiting Professor at the College of Europe, Bruges, Belgium.