dam was from the start a negotiation in search of a purpose. Large-scale negotiations in EU history- from the Treaty of Rome to Maastricht- have usually centred on a major substantive agenda, normally either trade liberaliza
The ratification of the Treaty of Lisbon (“Treaty”) in 2009 was heralded as a new era. It was antici...
As the world\u27s largest trading block, the European Union (EU) has committed itself to an ambitiou...
It is widely debated in studies of international negotiations why certain negotiators are more succe...
This article explores and offers an in-depth empirical account of the efforts made by the centre-rig...
The Treaty of Amsterdam was the result of the 1996-97 Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) amongst the...
The introduction of ‘cooperation in the fields of justice and home affairs’ in the guise of Title VI...
This paper examines the principal contributions to debates surrounding European integration which ha...
The European Union (“Union” or “EU”) is an important actor in the international arena. The Union beh...
On February 27-28, 1998, the Center on European Union Law of the Fordham Law School was pleased to p...
After the referendums in France and the Netherlands, the European Union was in disarray. However, po...
The core argument of this article is that pre-negotiation matters. Policy problems are not just ‘out...
presented as a turning point in the history of European integration. This article argues that, altho...
Legally known as the Treaty on European Union, the Maastricht Treaty entered into force on 1 Novembe...
The overall picture presented by the media regarding the two day and two night Amsterdam meeting of ...
Last December saw the culmination in the Maastricht Summit of the Intergovernmental Conferences (IGC...
The ratification of the Treaty of Lisbon (“Treaty”) in 2009 was heralded as a new era. It was antici...
As the world\u27s largest trading block, the European Union (EU) has committed itself to an ambitiou...
It is widely debated in studies of international negotiations why certain negotiators are more succe...
This article explores and offers an in-depth empirical account of the efforts made by the centre-rig...
The Treaty of Amsterdam was the result of the 1996-97 Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) amongst the...
The introduction of ‘cooperation in the fields of justice and home affairs’ in the guise of Title VI...
This paper examines the principal contributions to debates surrounding European integration which ha...
The European Union (“Union” or “EU”) is an important actor in the international arena. The Union beh...
On February 27-28, 1998, the Center on European Union Law of the Fordham Law School was pleased to p...
After the referendums in France and the Netherlands, the European Union was in disarray. However, po...
The core argument of this article is that pre-negotiation matters. Policy problems are not just ‘out...
presented as a turning point in the history of European integration. This article argues that, altho...
Legally known as the Treaty on European Union, the Maastricht Treaty entered into force on 1 Novembe...
The overall picture presented by the media regarding the two day and two night Amsterdam meeting of ...
Last December saw the culmination in the Maastricht Summit of the Intergovernmental Conferences (IGC...
The ratification of the Treaty of Lisbon (“Treaty”) in 2009 was heralded as a new era. It was antici...
As the world\u27s largest trading block, the European Union (EU) has committed itself to an ambitiou...
It is widely debated in studies of international negotiations why certain negotiators are more succe...