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No.8/03
Author:
Volker Roeben
Title:
Constitutionalism of Inverse
Hierarchy: the Case of the European Union
Abstract:
On 20 June 2003, the European
Convention presented the European Council of Thessaloniki with a Draft Treaty
establishing a Constitution for Europe. This paper proposes that this draft
treaty reflects the specific, if not traditional, constitutionalism has evolved
over the half-century course of European integration, in particular since 1992,
when the Treaty on European Union was concluded at Maastricht. In this sense,
the Union's constitutionalism is stable even if its positive constitutional
manifestations are not. The specific constitutionalism of the EU is a
three-level system of government that works through an inverse hierarchy. The
constitutional nation State is placed both at the lowest and at the highest
level of this system, with the Union/Communities taking the middle level. In
the first process, the Union forms a hierarchical centre with the Member States
acting at the "lowest level" to the extent the Community enacts policies in
areas such as the internal market and the Member States carry them out. But the
periphery also inverts this hierarchy with the Member States acting at the
"highest level" to the extent that they inspire and determine the action of the
centre. At this level of the hierarchy, the Member States act through the heads
of States and governments assembled in the European Council, the national
constitutional courts and national parliaments in their treaty-making capacity,
while at the "lowest" level, they act through their executive organs and their
courts. This interaction between centre and periphery is the precondition for
the working of the institutions of democracy, the Rule of law, and individual
rights within the Union. The article analyses these institutions of
constitutionalism as they operate in an inverse hierarchy, taking into account,
when appropriate, the Draft Constitutional Treaty.
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