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Constitutional Preferences And Parliamentary Reform Explaining National Parliaments Adaptation To European Integration 1st Edition Winzen

  • SKU: BELL-5892578
Constitutional Preferences And Parliamentary Reform Explaining National Parliaments Adaptation To European Integration 1st Edition Winzen
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Constitutional Preferences And Parliamentary Reform Explaining National Parliaments Adaptation To European Integration 1st Edition Winzen instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.11 MB
Pages: 264
Author: Winzen, Thomas
ISBN: 9780198793397, 0198793391
Language: English
Year: 2017
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Constitutional Preferences And Parliamentary Reform Explaining National Parliaments Adaptation To European Integration 1st Edition Winzen by Winzen, Thomas 9780198793397, 0198793391 instant download after payment.

This book provides a comprehensive account of national parliaments' adaptation to European integration. Advancing an explanation based on political parties' constitutional preferences, the volume investigates the nature and variation of parliamentary rights in European Union affairs across countries and levels of governance. In some member states, parliaments have traditionally been strong and parties hold intergovernmental visions of European integration. In these countries, strong parliamentary rights emerge in the context of parties' efforts to realise their preferred constitutional design for the European polity. Parliamentary rights remain weakly developed where federally-oriented parties prevail, and where parliaments have long been marginal arenas in domestic politics. Moreover, divergent constitutional preferences underlie inter-parliamentary disagreement on national parliaments' collective rights at the European level. Constitutional preferences are key to understanding why a 'Senate' of national parliaments never enjoyed support and why the alternatives subsequently put into place have stayed clear of committing national parliaments to any common policies.
This volume calls into question existing explanations that focus on strategic partisan incentives arising from minority and coalition government. It, furthermore rejects the exclusive attribution of parliamentary 'deficits' to the structural constraints created by European integration and, instead, restores a sense of accountability for parliamentary rights to political parties and their ideas for the European Union's constitutional design.

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