No.9/03
Symposium
EUROPEAN INTEGRATION: THE NEW GERMAN
SCHOLARSHIP
Author: Ramses A. Wessel
Title:
The Constitutional Relationship
between the European Union and the European Community: Consequences for the
Relationship with the Member States
Abstract:
This
contribution addresses the question of the complex legal relationship between
the European Union the European Community and their member states. It is argued
that the legal order of the Communities forms a part of the Union's legal
order. In that sense there is a single legal order of the Union, which may even
be perceived in terms of a constitution. This constitution may be seen as
overarching everything that goes on within the Union, on the basis of both the
Union and the Community treaties. Through the unity of the Union's legal order,
the member states do not stand in another relation to the Union than to the
Communities. With the Treaty on European Union they established a new
international legal person, the organs of which on the basis of decision-making
procedures are made competent to adopt decisions and to act on behalf of the
member states. As the Union constitution is based on an interdependence of all
norms in the European Union (including those based on the Community treaties),
it becomes increasingly difficult to make a strict separation between the three
parts of the Union. Although this paper was originally written in reaction to a
paper by Prof. Werner Schroeder, entitled The Constitutional Relationship
between the European Union and the European Communities, it can perfectly be
read on a stand alone basis as the arguments used by Schroeder are repeated.
Download: PDF
* | RTF**
* The free viewer (Acrobat Reader)
for PDF file is available at the
Adobe
Systems.
** rtf is a (more or less) universally readable
format. Just download the file, which can be opened in most word
processors. |