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7 - Europe and Constituent Powers

Ruptures with the Neoliberal Consensus?

from Part II - The Crisis as a Crisis of the EU’s Political and Democratic Legitimacy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2019

Eva Nanopoulos
Affiliation:
Queen Mary University of London
Fotis Vergis
Affiliation:
University of Manchester
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Summary

The European project has perhaps never been more thoroughly disputed across the whole range of the political spectrum, than it is today. From the far left to the far right, the ongoing crisis is precipitating robust reactions, sometimes caught up in extremist and xenophobic rhetoric and at other times motivated by progressive egalitarian demands. This analysis explores the constitutional relevance of the above developments with a special focus on the constitutional facets of the main outcome of the crisis, austerity, and the response given by European societies.

Constitutional discourse on the European crisis often tends to emphasise the constitutional mutations and institutional shifts of power equilibrium within both the Union and its individual Member States. Within Member States, the strengthening of the executive power has almost become a leitmotif as the safeguarding of austerity under the pretence of necessity and at the expense of democracy informs parliamentary routine.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Crisis behind the Eurocrisis
The Eurocrisis as a Multidimensional Systemic Crisis of the EU
, pp. 156 - 172
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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