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2017 | 37 | 143-162

Article title

Member States’ Interests and EU Law: Filtering, Moderating and Transforming?

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This article investigates the engagement of EU law with the interests represented and pursued by the Member States within the framework of the European Union. In principle, because the interests which the Member States feed into the EU governance machinery are formulated in political processes at the national level, and thus possess paramount political legitimacy, EU law may only interact with those interests when a clear and sufficient mandate has been provided for doing so. Such mandates follow from Treaty provisions or EU legislation. They embody common political agreements among the Member States by which they commit themselves to realising the specific interests they share, as well as achieving related common policy objectives. In practice, however, the boundaries of EU law’s mandate are difficult to determine with precision, and this may weaken the legitimacy of EU law’s interventions. The weaker legitimacy of the law raises particular problems in the law of the Single Market, where the interests pursued by national governments are subjected to filtering, moderation, and even transformation by the Court of Justice.

Year

Volume

37

Pages

143-162

Physical description

Dates

published
2018-09-01

Contributors

author
  • Centre for Social Sciences, Hungarian Academy of Sciences

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-1bedaee6-720f-4c27-8b6a-178e4be1975a
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