No.15/03
Author:
Annalisa Reale
Title:
Representation of
Interests, Participatory Democracy and Lawmaking in the European Union: Which
Role and Which Rules for the Social Partners?
Abstract:
The paper provides for an analysis of
the lawmaking procedure, enshrined in art.138 and art. 139 of the EC Treaty, in
the area of EU social policy. The legislative scheme provided therein
introduced an institutionalised model of participation of "civil society"
groups (EU-level organizations of labour and management) to European
governance, and, without a doubt, represents an extremely important field of
experimentation for new self-regulatory processes. However, it must be assessed
whether the current framework of the procedure allows the attainment of the
fundamental aim pursued by participatory models of conferring more democratic
legitimacy into the lawmaking process. As a matter of fact, the lack of
representativity and accountability of the social partners (acting as
lawmakers) and the very limited role of EU institutions in the process may
endanger the target of ensuring an adequate representation of a wide range of
interests, eventually resulting in the paradox of emphasising, rather than
lessening, the democratic deficit in the lawmaking process.
After having examined the
implications of the procedure in terms of normative models of representation,
legitimacy and accountability, in a constructive perspective two fundamental
changes are advocated: (i) the establishment by the EU institutions and by the
social partners of more defined rules of representativity, accountability and
transparency of the process and (ii) reshaping the balance between private and
public actors in the process -by supplementing the functional representation of
the social partners with a wider representation of interests by the EU
institutions- - in favour of a more inclusive and fair representation of
interests.
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