Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Europeanization and domestic institutional change: A historical institutionalist approach
- Part II Reinforcing cooperative federalism: Institutional adaptation to Europeanization in Germany
- 4 The Federal Republic of Germany as a model of cooperative federalism
- 5 The rinascimento of cooperative federalism: The impact of Europeanization on the territorial institutions of Germany
- 6 Conclusion
- Part III Transforming competitive regionalism: Institutional adaptation to Europeanization in Spain
- Part IV Sharing versus shifting the costs of adaptation: The Europeanization of environmental policy-making in Germany and Spain
- Conclusions: Toward convergence in Europe?
- Appendix: The major EU environmental policies of the policy study
- List of references
- Index
5 - The rinascimento of cooperative federalism: The impact of Europeanization on the territorial institutions of Germany
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Europeanization and domestic institutional change: A historical institutionalist approach
- Part II Reinforcing cooperative federalism: Institutional adaptation to Europeanization in Germany
- 4 The Federal Republic of Germany as a model of cooperative federalism
- 5 The rinascimento of cooperative federalism: The impact of Europeanization on the territorial institutions of Germany
- 6 Conclusion
- Part III Transforming competitive regionalism: Institutional adaptation to Europeanization in Spain
- Part IV Sharing versus shifting the costs of adaptation: The Europeanization of environmental policy-making in Germany and Spain
- Conclusions: Toward convergence in Europe?
- Appendix: The major EU environmental policies of the policy study
- List of references
- Index
Summary
This chapter demonstrates how, over a period of more than 40 years, the Länder have pulled together in pursuing a compensation-through-participation strategy in responding to the challenges of Europeanization. Their cooperative strategy facilitated a sharing of adaptational costs, which allowed for a flexible redressing of the territorial balance of power and resulted in a reinforcement and certain revival (rinascimento) of German cooperative federalism.
The double loss of competencies and the uneven distribution of “say and pay”
Europeanization is, alongside German unification, the most important challenge that cooperative federalism has been faced with so far. After the constitutional amendments in the 1960s and 1970s, the transfer of domestic competencies to the European caused the second major push toward territorial centralization. Unlike joint tasks and mixed financing, however, Europeanization entails a gradual erosion of regional autonomy, which increases as European integration proceeds. Moreover, Europeanization entails a twofold logic of centralization: the Länder lose competencies both at the regional and the federal level, which fundamentally alters the territorial balance of power in favor of the central state.
Like all institutionally well-entrenched regions, the Länder lose policy competencies in the area of their exclusive responsibilities as a consequence of Europeanization. Unlike in domestic policy-making, the Länder do not receive any compensation for such losses. Once their competencies are transferred to the European level, the Länder do not have any direct input on decisions taken in these areas. The number of exclusive Länder competencies is, however, rather small (culture, media, education, justice and home affairs).
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- States and Regions in the European UnionInstitutional Adaptation in Germany and Spain, pp. 53 - 87Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001