ABSTRACT

Over the last twenty years, processes of pluralization, differentiation and trans-nationalization in the European Union have arguably challenged the centrality of law to European integration. Yet these developments also present opportunities to investigate new understandings of law triggered by European integration. The contributors to this book revisit one of the first academic projects to conceptualise and study European legal integration - the early 'Integration through Law' School. On this basis, they consider continuities and discontinuities in the underlying social and political landscape which the law is to integrate (the 'object' of integration), the forms and capacities of the law itself (the 'agent' of integration), and the way these two dimensions reflect on each other. Displaying different normative concerns and varied theoretical starting points, all contributors maintain that 'integration through law' remains of enduring significance to the European integration process. The volume provides a valuable reference for scholars in the field of European integration studies and European legal and political theory.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

What Law for What Polity? ‘Integration through Law' in the European Union Revisited

part I|58 pages

The Constitutional Frame of EU Legal Integration

chapter Chapter 1|18 pages

European Integration and European Constitutionalism

Consonances and Dissonances

chapter Chapter 3|14 pages

Taking Agency Seriously

An Examination of Legal Integration and Constitutionalism

chapter |6 pages

Intervention 1

Mapping the EU Constitutional Frame: Three Layers

part II|52 pages

Conceptions and Roles of Law in European Integration

chapter Chapter 6|14 pages

Identifying the European Union

Legal Integration and European Communities

chapter |6 pages

Intervention 2

Law, Integration and Process

part III|62 pages

Beyond ‘Integration Through Law'?

chapter Chapter 9|14 pages

The Double Fragmentation of Law

Legal System-Internal Differentiation and the Process of Europeanization

chapter |4 pages

Intervention 3

Plus ça change …

chapter |6 pages

Epilogue