Prix bas
CHF132.00
Habituellement expédié sous 2 à 4 semaines.
Auteur
Maria Patrin is a lecturer and research fellow at the University of Florence. She holds an LLM and a PhD in law from the European University Institute (EUI) and a postgraduate master's degree from the College of Europe in Bruges. She has been Research Associate at the Academy of European Law and at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies of the EUI. Her main research interests lie in EU institutional law, EU legal history, and EU integration. Prior to her academic career, Dr Patrin worked for several years in Brussels as a Director in the EU Public Affairs Agency, Grayling.
Texte du rabat
Maria Patrin's Collegiality in the European Commission offers a critically needed examination of collegiality - the core legal principle governing the Commission's internal decision-making process. The novel study combines theory and empirical practice to advance an innovative framework for assessing the Commission's institutional role and power.
Résumé
Collegiality is a core legal principle of the European Commission's internal decision-making, acting as a safeguard to the Commission's supranational character and ensuring the Commission's independence from EU Member States. Despite collegiality's central role within the Commission, its legal and political implications have remained critically underexamined. Collegiality in the European Commission sheds light on this crucial aspect of the Commission's work for the first time. In this novel study on collegiality, Maria Patrin proposes an innovative framework for assessing the Commission's institutional role and power. The book's first part legally examines collegiality, retracing collegial procedures and actors in different layers of decision-making from the Commission's services to the College of Commissioners. The second part of the book explores the implementation of collegiality through illustrative case studies, focusing on various Commission functions including legislative initiative, infringement proceedings, and economic governance. Partin's empirical analysis unveils a disconnect between the legal notion of collegiality and its concrete application in institutional practices. These variations raise normative questions on how to ensure the unity of the Commission as a collegial body despite the diversification of decision-making functions. They also invite a re-examination of the Commission's multifaceted role in the current EU institutional, legal, and political setting. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach that delves into both the legal substance and the political-institutional practice of collegiality, this book offers a unique, behind-the-scenes insight into the Commission's decision-making processes, furthering our understanding of the EU's institutional system.