This article focuses on a new type of rules that the European Union may adopt: delegated legislation. Although this instrument may be new, it follows from a long-standing controversy over the means by which the European Parliament can hold the European Commission to account when it adopts executive rules. On the basis of interviews and documentary evidence, this article aims to test to what degree the new system delivers on its promise of stronger accountability. Although the new system is still in its infancy, the article concludes that formal rules, internal norms and practices are already indicative of stronger legislative control. However, capacity issues within the European Parliament, as well as a lack of public transparency, may well...
This article brings classic constitutionalism to an analysis of delegated legislation in the Europea...
The majority of rules adopted at the EU level are not issued by democratically elected institutions,...
This article brings classic constitutionalism to an analysis of delegated legislation in the Europea...
This article focuses on a new type of rules that the European Union may adopt: delegated legislation...
Most European Union rules are made by the Commission, not the Council of Ministers or the European P...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
The establishment of delegated acts should have brought forward significant innovations. In principl...
This article critically elaborates Majone’s argument that there are two logics underlying the delega...
When it adopts an EC law, the Council of Ministers, the main legislative body of the Community, deci...
With each legislative issue, legislators have to decide whether to delegate decision-making to the e...
Abstract: This article uses the theory of delegation of Epstein and O’Halloran, developed for the US...
The European Parliament is frequently seen as the 'big winner' of the Lisbon Treaty, given the fact ...
The non-representative character of the Commission’s powers has been used to level criticism at Comm...
This article brings classic constitutionalism to an analysis of delegated legislation in the Europea...
The majority of rules adopted at the EU level are not issued by democratically elected institutions,...
This article brings classic constitutionalism to an analysis of delegated legislation in the Europea...
This article focuses on a new type of rules that the European Union may adopt: delegated legislation...
Most European Union rules are made by the Commission, not the Council of Ministers or the European P...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
The establishment of delegated acts should have brought forward significant innovations. In principl...
This article critically elaborates Majone’s argument that there are two logics underlying the delega...
When it adopts an EC law, the Council of Ministers, the main legislative body of the Community, deci...
With each legislative issue, legislators have to decide whether to delegate decision-making to the e...
Abstract: This article uses the theory of delegation of Epstein and O’Halloran, developed for the US...
The European Parliament is frequently seen as the 'big winner' of the Lisbon Treaty, given the fact ...
The non-representative character of the Commission’s powers has been used to level criticism at Comm...
This article brings classic constitutionalism to an analysis of delegated legislation in the Europea...
The majority of rules adopted at the EU level are not issued by democratically elected institutions,...
This article brings classic constitutionalism to an analysis of delegated legislation in the Europea...