6533b854fe1ef96bd12ae960
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Second chamber, ‘congress of ambassadors’ or federal presidency : Parliamentary and non-parliamentary aspects in the European Council's rules of procedure
Kari PalonenClaudia Wiesnersubject
PresidencySociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectParliamentary Procedure050601 international relationsPoliticsParliamentary RhetoricEuropean integration050602 political science & public administrationLisbon TreatyConceptual historymedia_common.cataloged_instanceta517SociologyEuropean UnionEuropean unionTreatymedia_commonPolitical Systems05 social sciences0506 political scienceLawConceptual HistoryRhetoricPolityEuropean Councildescription
SUMMARYThe development of the European Union (EU) regime, with the frequent changes of institutions and their competencies by treaty revisions, allows for new opportunities for parliamentary studies. This article discusses the role and competencies of the European Council (EC) in the EU regime, using the heuristic and methodological resources of procedural commentaries, parliamentary rhetoric, conceptual history and political regime analysis. This study is a textual analysis, based on the 2009 Lisbon Treaty and especially on the EC's rules of procedure. The Lisbon Treaty and the respective rules of procedure serve as key documents that fix the rules, the framework and the margin of manoeuvre for the EU's institutions. This is particularly relevant in the European Union as a ‘polity in the making’, as continuous changes in institutional competencies are the rule. These changes both leave room for and are shaped by acting politically between and within the institutions. Taking Quentin Skinner's thesis that ...
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-07-03 | Parliaments, Estates and Representation |