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Class Notes and Example Exam Questions (17/20) Institutions and Governance of the European Union 2023/2024 (4019979EER)

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Weekly lecture notes and reading summaries, thoroughly organised and compiled with example questions and key takeaways noted by the professor or deduced myself. This is NOT a brief summary, but organises all relevant information. The information is divided by the weekly lectures, but, for example the week on the European Parliament houses all relevant information about the European Parliament that was learned in other weeks as well. I found this helpful for clearer understanding between similar terms (e.g. Council of the EU versus the Council), as the course at times went back and forth. The information is in organised, easily readable bullet points, with relevant pictographs from the slides. There are questions from the discussions in class included, as well as the responses given in class, from the professor, and from the readings. A "IMPORTANT EXAM NOTE FOR THE LUCKY READER OF THESE NOTES" is on page 9 and explains the types of questions that were given last semester. I wish you the best of luck!

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Subido en
15 de abril de 2024
Archivo actualizado en
15 de abril de 2024
Número de páginas
94
Escrito en
2023/2024
Tipo
Notas de lectura
Profesor(es)
Florian trauner
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Week 1 – Introduction


What are the objectives and methods of this course? What kind of entity is the EU? How to analyse
institutions and governance of the EU?
Course objectives:
 Challenges and resilience of the EU integration process
 Theoretical debates on EU integration and governance
 Dynamics of EU-decision-making
 Role of institutions in EU public policy
Key ideas:
 EU crises and resilience to crises
EU Treaties and Competency Milestones:
 1952
o The European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)
 Supranational
 First move away from intergovernmentalism previously favoured in
cooperative efforts like OEEC and Council of Europe
 France and Germany led
 With Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg
 Schuman was first big proponent (from Luxembourg)
 Economic and political
 Principle materials for waging war
 Disallow German rearmament, but allow back into European fold against
encroaching Cold War
 Institutions:
 High Authority: Supervisory authority that administers coal and steel
resources
o 9 appointees of the 6 MS governments
o Decision-making power
o Will become what Commission is today
 (Parliamentary) Assembly
o National parliament delegates
o Supervisory/advisory powers
 Almost devoid of authority
o Maintained equilibrium balance between institutions
o Symbolic of European unification
o Formally subjected High Authority/Commission to democratic
control
 Council
o National representatives
o Limited decision-making power
o Consultative role

,  Court of Justice
o 9 judges
o European Defence Community (EDC) and European Political Community (EPC) both
failed at the time
 Included European army, common institutions, and common budget
 Parliamentary
 Roused considerable opposition
 Considerable supranational power and cooperation
 Failed in France
 Setback for integration
 But, encouraged proponents to focus on economic rather than political aspects
 1958
o It would be negative (integration) to say Rome was built in a day, or that it was political,
but we are (four) free(doms) to say that it laid down the foundations for an ever-closer
union
o Treaties of Rome
 European Economic Community (EEC)
 European Atomic Energy Community (EURATOM)
 France, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy, and Luxembourg
 Signatories were “determined to lay the foundations of an ever closer union
among the peoples of Europe”
 Objective of “Common Market”
 Four freedoms to increase efficiency:
o Goods
o Capital
o Workers
o Services
o Core of EU economic constitution
o To promote harmonious economic development
 Negative integration
 Remove barriers to trade
o E.g. tariffs: things that increase cost of imports; quotas: limits on
number of imports
 Common customs tariff
 Legislative power divided
 Commission (proposed)
 Council of Ministers (voted)
 Assembly (consultation only)
 Executive power divided
 Commission (watchdog enforcement; principal negotiator on behalf of
Community)
 Council (concluded international agreements, policy agenda, Community
budget)
 Assembly (some power over budget, power of censure – never used)
 Institutions
 New: Commission
o Executive authority

, o Members drawn from MS, obliged to act independently to
represent Community
 New: Council of Ministers
o National representatives
o Limited decision-making power
o Consultative role
 New: Economic and Social Committee
o Advisory status
 Continued: (Parliamentary) Assembly
o 1962: Changed name to European Parliament; official in 1986
SEA
o National parliament delegates
o Supervisory/advisory powers
 Continued: Court of Justice
o 9 judges
 1987
o I am positive the Community (method) wanted to work together more in decision-
making and integration, with a single market
o The Single European Act
 Created formally the Single Market
 Still a disappointment to those who advocated sweeping reform in face of
political stagnation before it
 But did pretty good:
 Heralded revival of Community method and momentum towards integration
 Positive integration, as well as negative
 Approximation/harmonisation
 European regulation in place of national regulation
 One set of rules = less costs
 Article 14 TFEU
 Qualified majority voting in Council here, cooperation with Parliament
 Boosted Community Method
 Boosted role of the Commission
 Transformed role of European Parliament
 New legislative procedure = “Cooperation procedure”
o Applied to defined list of Treaty Articles
 European Parliament could block proposals with a bit of
support in the Council
 Community competences:
 Cooperation in economic and monetary union
 Social policy
 Economic and social cohesion
 Research and technology development
 Environmental policy
o Commission would have to take seriously the views of the
European Parliament
 Gave formal recognition to European Council
 Court of First Instance to support ECJ

,  1993
o Maa stricht is a temple. If you spell temple wrong it is spelled TEUmple.
o Maastricht Treaty: Treaty of the European Union (TEU)
 Followed momentum for Community method from SEA
 Introduced CFSP and JHA in temple-structure Treaty framework
 Temple Structure:
 Community Method/Supranational
o First Pillar: European Community
o Commission, Parliament, and ECJ had more power here
 Intergovernmental
o Second Pillar: Common Foreign and Security Policy
 CFSP built on European Political Cooperation
 Established objectives of EU action
 Preservation of peace
 International security
 Respect for human rights
 Development of democracy
 MS had to inform and consult each other on matters of
common foreign/security policy
 To execute efficient, combined influence
 Integrated intergovernmentalism
o Third Pillar: Justice and Home Affairs
 Asylum, immigration, and third country nationals
 International crime issues
 Judicial, customs, and police cooperation, including
establishment of Europol European police office
 MS felt too nationally sensitive
 Decision-making dominated by Council, limited ECJ
powers
 Lisbon Treaty now has brought all of this into the regular
part of the Treaty
 Intergovernmental
o MS in Council and European Council retained reins of power in
these areas
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