Revisiting Flexible Integration in Times of Post-Enlargement and the Lustration of EU Constitutionalism

Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy, Vol. 4, pp. 132-155, 2008

Posted: 29 Jan 2009

Date Written: January 28, 2009

Abstract

With an eye on the changes of immense if not radical proportions that European integration has undergone in the past five years, are there any grounds for revisiting the process of flexible integration and using some of its potentials for the benefit of integration in the future? This is the main question of this article, the purpose of which, in contrast to the bulk of the literature in this field, is not so much to describe or conduct a textual analysis of the flexibility clauses of various treaties, but to understand the deeper or background reasons why flexibility in the EU has developed as it has. The article consists of three parts. The first part traces the historical development of flexible integration. This is followed by a study of the reasons why flexibility has remained on the margins of the integration process. Finally, having examined the EU's relatively non-flexible past and the reasons for this, the focus moves to its present and future.

Keywords: European Union, Flexible Integration, Constitutionalism

Suggested Citation

Avbelj, Matej, Revisiting Flexible Integration in Times of Post-Enlargement and the Lustration of EU Constitutionalism (January 28, 2009). Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy, Vol. 4, pp. 132-155, 2008, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1334214

Matej Avbelj (Contact Author)

New University ( email )

Žanova ulica 3
Kranj, 4000
Slovenia

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