Erik O. Eriksen is Professor of Political Science and director of ARENA, Centre for European Studies at the University of Oslo, Norway.
Christian Joerges is Professor of European Economic Law at ZERP, Centre for European Law and Politics at the University of Bremen, Germany.
Florian Rödl is Research Fellow at ZERP, Centre for European Law and Politics at the University of Bremen, Germany.
1. Introduction: Europe's Unsettled Political Order Erik Oddvar Eriksen, Christian Joerges and Florian Rödl Part 1: Rule of Law in a Context of Governance 2. Three Forms of Governance and Three Forms of Power Poul F. Kjaer 3. Participatory Governance and European Administrative Law Rainer Nickel 4. Judges and Lawyers beyond Constitutive Power Michelle Everson and Julia Eisner 5. Judicial Governance in the European Union Chrisoph U. Schmid Part 2: The Social Deficit of the Union 6. Can there be a European Social Model? Waltraud Schelkle 7. Approaching the 'Social Union'? Alexander Graser 8. Constitutional Integration of Labour Constitutions Florian Rödl Part 3: Identity and Collective Memories 9. Working through 'Bitter Experiences' towards a Purified European Identity? Christian Joerges 10. A 'Thick' Constitutional Patriotism for the EU? Part 4: Post-national Democracy in Europe 11. Taking Democracy Seriously- Europe after the Failure of its Constitution Hauke Brunkhorst 12. A Done Deal? The EU's Legitimacy Conundrum Revisited Erik Oddvar Eriksen and John Erik Fossum
To many, the rejections of the Constitutional Treaty by Dutch and French voters in 2005 came as a shock. However, given the many tensions and the many unresolved issues it was quite unsurprising. The challenges facing the Constitutional debate go to the core of the European integration process as they have to do with the terms on which to establish a post-national political order.
This book deals with four themes which make up the main sources of the 'constitutional crisis':
The problem of the rule of law in a context of governance beyond the nation state
The problem of the social deficit of the Union
The problem of identity and collective memories
The problem of institutionalizing post-national democracy.
These themes constitute the unfinished agenda of the European integration process. Law, Democracy and Solidarity in a Post-national Union is based on the efforts of a collection of top scholars in the fields of Law, Political Science, Sociology and Economics, and will appeal to students and scholars of political science, the European Union and European studies.