Most of the recent literature on the European Parliament’s (EP) role in trade policy focuses on the new, post-Lisbon, legislative and ratification powers. This contribution instead analyses the monitoring role and argues that the EP’s incentive to monitor the implementation of EU trade policy has increased significantly after the Lisbon Treaty. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach, the chapter examines the rationale for the EP’s monitoring of EU trade policy implementation and links this to the different monitoring instruments at the institution’s disposal. It concludes with some of the key findings from a survey conducted on the EP’s monitoring of three areas of trade policy, namely free trade agreements, trade defence instruments and th...
The Lisbon Treaty altered the way EU trade negotiations are conducted, by granting new powers to the...
Since the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Parliament wields the power of consent o...
This research goes against an often-claimed prophecy that parliaments are ‘the losers of globalisati...
Since the Treaty of Lisbon, trade policy has become an explicit part of the EU's external policy and...
Since the Treaty of Lisbon, trade policy has become an explicit part of the EU's external policy and...
As the world\u27s largest trading block, the European Union (EU) has committed itself to an ambitiou...
The first 16 months of the EU’s common commercial policy (CCP) in the post-Lisbon period provide ind...
This paper analyses the most salient developments in the EU’s trade and investment policy since the ...
On 9 December 2016, the Interest Group on International Economic Law (IEL IG) of the European Societ...
This paper aims to assess the role of the European Parliament (EP) in the recent reforms of the EU’s...
The first 16 months of the EU’s common commercial policy (CCP) in the post-Lisbon period provide ind...
Since the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Parliament wields the power of consent o...
Summary: The Lisbon Treaty greatly extended the scope of the co-decision procedure so that it now ap...
This paper presents a game-theoretical analysis of European Union (EU) trade policy and the Lisbon T...
This chapter discusses how policy decisions are taken in the European Union (EU). The chapter begins...
The Lisbon Treaty altered the way EU trade negotiations are conducted, by granting new powers to the...
Since the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Parliament wields the power of consent o...
This research goes against an often-claimed prophecy that parliaments are ‘the losers of globalisati...
Since the Treaty of Lisbon, trade policy has become an explicit part of the EU's external policy and...
Since the Treaty of Lisbon, trade policy has become an explicit part of the EU's external policy and...
As the world\u27s largest trading block, the European Union (EU) has committed itself to an ambitiou...
The first 16 months of the EU’s common commercial policy (CCP) in the post-Lisbon period provide ind...
This paper analyses the most salient developments in the EU’s trade and investment policy since the ...
On 9 December 2016, the Interest Group on International Economic Law (IEL IG) of the European Societ...
This paper aims to assess the role of the European Parliament (EP) in the recent reforms of the EU’s...
The first 16 months of the EU’s common commercial policy (CCP) in the post-Lisbon period provide ind...
Since the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Parliament wields the power of consent o...
Summary: The Lisbon Treaty greatly extended the scope of the co-decision procedure so that it now ap...
This paper presents a game-theoretical analysis of European Union (EU) trade policy and the Lisbon T...
This chapter discusses how policy decisions are taken in the European Union (EU). The chapter begins...
The Lisbon Treaty altered the way EU trade negotiations are conducted, by granting new powers to the...
Since the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty, the European Parliament wields the power of consent o...
This research goes against an often-claimed prophecy that parliaments are ‘the losers of globalisati...