
In several EU Member States, constitutional courts have reviewed European law on its compatibility with national constitutional law. These judgments deal with issues of major importance such as EU democratic legitimacy, the protection of fundamental rights, and the status of national sovereignty within the EU. Yet should national courts decide such issues of key constitutional significance for the EU? Or is it more democratic to leave these matters to political institutions that represent Europe's citizens and are politically accountable to them?In Judging European Democracy, Nik de Boer argues that the national courts' review of European law can actually constrain democratic debate over the EU's constitutional underpinnings. Rather than opening up a space for discourse or addressing democratic problems with the EU's decision-making process, national courts risk taking sides in good faith political disagreements among elected legislators about constitutional questions relating to the EU, thus distorting, rather than protecting, the democratic decision-making process.Judging European Democracy uniquely combines constitutional and political theory with an in-depth case study of the German Constitutional Court, the EU's most authoritative constitutional court. Based on an extensive analysis of parliamentary debates, EU policy documents, and interviews with politicians, policymakers, and constitutional court judges, the case study shows how the German Constitutional Court has distorted political debate and democracy in the EU. Scholars, practitioners, and policymakers involved in political theory, political science, EU constitutional law, and European integration will find this book compelling.
This book investigates whether the judicial review of European Union law by national constitutional courts serves to protect democratic legitimacy or, conversely, undermines the democratic decision-making process. Nik de Boer, a scholar in European law and political theory, examines the tension between judicial oversight and legislative accountability. He argues that when national courts intervene in constitutional questions regarding the EU, they often inadvertently constrain political discourse and take sides in legitimate legislative disagreements, thereby distorting the democratic process rather than safeguarding it.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in European integration and constitutional law identify this work as a significant contribution to the debate on judicial activism within the EU framework. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the rigorous methodology applied to the study of parliamentary and judicial interactions.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2023-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192845233
ISBN-13:
9780192845238
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