Lisbon legislative vetoes to override the European Commission’s rulemaking. Using an original data set of legislative vetoes of Commission acts by both European legislators from December 2009 - April 2017, the contribution shows that levels of the formal exercise of the legislative veto to overrule the Commission’s regulatory policies are very low. Particularly interesting, the level of exercise of legislative veto provisions has not increased significantly since the Lisbon Treaty came into effect, suggesting that the ways in which the Treaty formally augmented the powers of legislative scrutiny have not resulted in appreciably greater formal exercise of these powers ultima ratio. Moreover, no significant differences appear between the Coun...
peer reviewedThe Treaty of Lisbon has introduced a complex new typology of acts, distinguishing betw...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
This contribution endeavors to explain several dysfunctions in the European Union’s legislative proc...
Several reforms have taken place at the EU level to try and address the criticism that EU decision-m...
Since the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Parliament wields the power of consent o...
Most European Union rules are made by the Commission, not the Council of Ministers or the European P...
The Treaty of Lisbon has altered the institutional mechanism of the European Union. The introduction...
Some 300 legislative acts are adopted every year by the European Parliament and the Council, or by t...
The European Parliament is frequently seen as the ‘big winner’ of the Lisbon Treaty, given the fact ...
The history of comitology – the system of implementation committees that control the Commission in t...
After nine years of debate on institutional reform, the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty brings...
The Treaty of Lisbon (TFEU) significantly changes the theory and practice of the delegation of execu...
When the Lisbon treaty entered into force in 2009 it marked the peak of a long period of institution...
peer reviewedThe Treaty of Lisbon has introduced a complex new typology of acts, distinguishing betw...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
This contribution endeavors to explain several dysfunctions in the European Union’s legislative proc...
Several reforms have taken place at the EU level to try and address the criticism that EU decision-m...
Since the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Parliament wields the power of consent o...
Most European Union rules are made by the Commission, not the Council of Ministers or the European P...
The Treaty of Lisbon has altered the institutional mechanism of the European Union. The introduction...
Some 300 legislative acts are adopted every year by the European Parliament and the Council, or by t...
The European Parliament is frequently seen as the ‘big winner’ of the Lisbon Treaty, given the fact ...
The history of comitology – the system of implementation committees that control the Commission in t...
After nine years of debate on institutional reform, the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty brings...
The Treaty of Lisbon (TFEU) significantly changes the theory and practice of the delegation of execu...
When the Lisbon treaty entered into force in 2009 it marked the peak of a long period of institution...
peer reviewedThe Treaty of Lisbon has introduced a complex new typology of acts, distinguishing betw...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
This contribution endeavors to explain several dysfunctions in the European Union’s legislative proc...