none1noThe establishment of delegated acts should have brought forward significant innovations. In principle, under art.290 TFEU, the Commission now has the monopoly of delegated powers, which ought to be distinguished from implementing powers; the co-legislators should control the delegation on an equal basis, and the comitology procedures should be formally demised. The article seeks to demonstrate that, in practice, these major reforms have been eluded. Instead, a shift in the horizontal and vertical balance of delegated powers has occurred, in favour of the Council and of the Member States respectively. This has, in turn, limited the possible constitutional added value of the Treaty reform, in particular in relation to the principle of ...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
The history of comitology – the system of implementation committees that control the Commission in ...
In this article we argue that that the delegation of implementing power to the Commission changes du...
The establishment of delegated acts should have brought forward significant innovations. In principl...
The European Parliament is frequently seen as the 'big winner' of the Lisbon Treaty, given the fact ...
Most European Union rules are made by the Commission, not the Council of Ministers or the European P...
peer reviewedThe Treaty of Lisbon has introduced a complex new typology of acts, distinguishing betw...
This Article gives an overview of the legal framework governing the exercise of the delegated and im...
The European Union’s system of delegated powers, ‘comitology’, underwent significant changes after t...
The European Union's system of delegated powers, comitology', underwent significant changes after th...
The European Union's system of delegated powers, comitology', underwent significant changes after th...
The Treaty of Lisbon has altered the institutional mechanism of the European Union. The introduction...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
The history of comitology – the system of implementation committees that control the Commission in ...
In this article we argue that that the delegation of implementing power to the Commission changes du...
The establishment of delegated acts should have brought forward significant innovations. In principl...
The European Parliament is frequently seen as the 'big winner' of the Lisbon Treaty, given the fact ...
Most European Union rules are made by the Commission, not the Council of Ministers or the European P...
peer reviewedThe Treaty of Lisbon has introduced a complex new typology of acts, distinguishing betw...
This Article gives an overview of the legal framework governing the exercise of the delegated and im...
The European Union’s system of delegated powers, ‘comitology’, underwent significant changes after t...
The European Union's system of delegated powers, comitology', underwent significant changes after th...
The European Union's system of delegated powers, comitology', underwent significant changes after th...
The Treaty of Lisbon has altered the institutional mechanism of the European Union. The introduction...
This book revisits the Treaty of Lisbon’s promise to further parliamentarise the EU’s functioning by...
The history of comitology – the system of implementation committees that control the Commission in ...
In this article we argue that that the delegation of implementing power to the Commission changes du...