Intergovernmental Conferences are generally seen as key events in the design of the European Union. This paper challenges this traditional view. Arguing that treaty reform should be regarded as a continuous process rather than a series of events, the paper develops a procedural understanding of constitutional change based on structuration theory. In such a perspective, analytical attention is re-directed from the political limelight of largely ceremonial events to the more obscure 'valleys' � the periods between the IGC summits in which the more momentous developments of European integration occur. The study of past instances of constitutional change as well as an analysis of the IGC leading to the Amsterdam Treaty demonstrate the significa...
This paper applies a principal-agent model of delegation, agency and agenda setting to the 1996 inte...
"The paper analyses the negotiations that took place in the framework of the Intergovernmental Confe...
The aim of this thesis is to discuss if a constructivist approach may be better suited than traditio...
intergovernmental conferences, constitutional change, Amsterdam Treaty, structuration theory
The overall picture presented by the media regarding the two day and two night Amsterdam meeting of ...
The Amsterdam Treaty constitutes a further step in the process of the gradual EU constitution buildi...
In the 1991 Intergovernmental Conference (IGC), conflicts over social policy endangered the whole tr...
The 1996‐97 intergovernmental conference (IGC) aimed, inter alia, at solving the most pressing insti...
This paper analyses the so-called 'Draft Treaty of Amsterdam' of 19 June 1997, focusing on the chang...
The Treaty of Amsterdam was the result of the 1996-97 Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) amongst the...
On February 27-28, 1998, the Center on European Union Law of the Fordham Law School was pleased to p...
This paper presents spatial models of the European Union's codecision procedure, and studies whether...
the European IGCs invariably also hold interest from a comparative constitutional law perspective. J...
This paper sheds light on an unexplored phase and a neglected actor in EU constitutional politics: t...
During the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) on Political Union in late September 1991, the Dutch P...
This paper applies a principal-agent model of delegation, agency and agenda setting to the 1996 inte...
"The paper analyses the negotiations that took place in the framework of the Intergovernmental Confe...
The aim of this thesis is to discuss if a constructivist approach may be better suited than traditio...
intergovernmental conferences, constitutional change, Amsterdam Treaty, structuration theory
The overall picture presented by the media regarding the two day and two night Amsterdam meeting of ...
The Amsterdam Treaty constitutes a further step in the process of the gradual EU constitution buildi...
In the 1991 Intergovernmental Conference (IGC), conflicts over social policy endangered the whole tr...
The 1996‐97 intergovernmental conference (IGC) aimed, inter alia, at solving the most pressing insti...
This paper analyses the so-called 'Draft Treaty of Amsterdam' of 19 June 1997, focusing on the chang...
The Treaty of Amsterdam was the result of the 1996-97 Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) amongst the...
On February 27-28, 1998, the Center on European Union Law of the Fordham Law School was pleased to p...
This paper presents spatial models of the European Union's codecision procedure, and studies whether...
the European IGCs invariably also hold interest from a comparative constitutional law perspective. J...
This paper sheds light on an unexplored phase and a neglected actor in EU constitutional politics: t...
During the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) on Political Union in late September 1991, the Dutch P...
This paper applies a principal-agent model of delegation, agency and agenda setting to the 1996 inte...
"The paper analyses the negotiations that took place in the framework of the Intergovernmental Confe...
The aim of this thesis is to discuss if a constructivist approach may be better suited than traditio...