European Union law
Encyclopedia : E : EU : EUR : European Union law
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- Three pillars
- Pillar I: European Community
- Pillar II: Common Foreign and Sec. Policy
- Pillar III: Police and Judicial Cooperation
- Political Institutions
- Commission
- :President (José Barroso)
- :Barroso Commission
- Council of Ministers & European Council
- :Presidency (Finland)
- Parliament
- :President (Josep Borrell)
- :MEPs
- :Constituencies
- ::Elections
- :::2009
- :::2004 /
- :Party groups
- :Committees
- Judiciary
- Court of Justice
- Court of First Instance
- Civil Service Tribunal
- Patent Tribunal
- Advisory bodies
- Economic and Social Committee
- Committee of the Regions
- Financial bodies
- European Central Bank
- European Investment Bank
- European Investment Fund
- Decentralised bodies
- Agencies of the EU
- Law
- Acquis communautaire
- Procedure
- Treaties
- Regulations - Directives - Decisions
- Recommendations - Opinions
- EU-related topics
- Economic and Monetary Union
- Enlargement
- Foreign relations
- Pan-European political parties
- :Table of affiliated parties by country
- :Party affiliations on the Council
The European Union is unique among international organisations in having a complex and highly developed system of internal law which has direct effect within the legal systems of its member states. The EU is not a federal government, nor is it an intergovernmental organisation. It involves reciprocal agreement within its fields of activity, as if countries have agreed to work together to agree.
There are three types of Union law:
- primary legislation: the treaties
- secondary legislation: regulations, directives, decisions, recommendations and opinions made by the Union's institutions in accordance with the treaties
- decisions of the European Court of Justice and the Court of First Instance
Primary legislation: the treaties
- Main article: Treaties of the European Union
- the ECSC Treaty of 1951 (Treaty of Paris)
- the EEC Treaty of 1957 (Treaty of Rome)
- the EURATOM Treaty of 1957 (Treaty of Rome)
- the Merger Treaty of 1965
- the Acts of Accession of the United Kingdom, Ireland and Denmark (1972)
- the Budgetary Treaty of 1970
- the Budgetary Treaty of 1975
- the Act of Accession of Greece (1979)
- the Acts of Accession of Spain and Portugal (1985)
- the Single European Act of 1986
- the Treaty of Maastricht of 1992 (Treaty of European Union)
- the Acts of Accession of Austria, Sweden and Finland (1994)
- the Treaty of Amsterdam of 1997
- the Treaty of Nice of 2001
- the Treaty of Accession 2003 of 2003
- the Treaty of Accession 2005 of 2005
The heads of state and government of the member states of European Union signed a constitution in 2004, but it subsequently failed to be ratified by the member states.
- Treaties and evolution of the structures of the European Union
| European Union - treaties, structure, history | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1952 | 1958 | 1967 | 1993 | 1999 | 2003 | ? |
| EC - European Community... | E U R O P E A N U N I O N ( E U ) | |||||
| European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) | ||||||
| European Economic Community (EEC) | European Community (EC) | |||||
| ...European Communities: ECSC, EEC (EC, 1993), Euratom | Justice & Home Affairs | |||||
| Police & Judicial Co-operation in Criminal matters (PJCC) | ||||||
| Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) | ||||||
| Euratom (European Atomic Energy Community) | ||||||
| Treaty of Paris (1951)>Treaty of Paris | Treaty of Rome>Treaties of Rome | Merger Treaty>Merger Treaty | Maastricht Treaty>Treaty of Maastricht | Amsterdam Treaty>Treaty of Amsterdam | Treaty of Nice>Treaty of Nice | Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe>European Constitution |
| "THREE PILLARS" - European Communities (EC, Euratom), Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), Police and Judicial Co-operation in Criminal matters (PJCC) | ||||||
Secondary legislation
Secondary legislation include regulations, directives, decisions, recommendations and opinions.Secondary legislation also includes interinstitutional agreements, which are agreements made between European Union institutions clarifying their respective powers, especially in budgetary matters. The Parliament, Commission and Council are capable of entering into such agreements.
The classification of legislative acts varies among the First, Second and Third Pillars.
In the case of the first pillar: Secondary legislation is classified based on to whom it is directed, and how it is to be implemented. Regulations and directives bind everyone, while decisions only affect the parties to whom they are addressed (which can be individuals, corporations, or member states). Regulations have direct effect, i.e. they are binding in and of themselves as part of national law, while directives require implementation by national legislation to be effective. However, states that fail or refuse to implement directives as part of national law can be fined by the European Court of Justice.
Directives and regulations can comprise of a mixture of maximum harmonisation and minimum harmonisation clauses, and can be enforced on either a home state or a host state basis.
All EU legislation must be based on a specific treaty article, which is referred to as the "legal basis" of the legislation.
The European Convention's Working Group on Simplification, identified in total 15 legal instruments of the European Union. These, divided in the three pillars of the European Union are the following:
If the planned European Constitution is ratified, these acts will be reduced to only six: EU laws, EU framework laws, decisions, regulations, recommendations and opinions.Community Pillar Common Foreign and Security Policy Police and Judicial Co-operation in Criminal Matters Regulations
Directives
Decisions
Conventions
Principles and general guidelines
Common strategies
Joint actions
Common positions
Decisions
Common positions
Framework decisions
Decisions
Conventions
Common: Recommendations, Opinions Legislative procedures
- Main article: European Union legislative procedure
History and development
Initially, the Consultation procedure was the primary interplay of the institutions. Under it, Council must wait (unless it initiates an emergency procedure) for the EP’s opinion before adopting the legislation. This possibility for delay was in the early days the EP’s only weapon.The role of the European Parliament in this institutional triangle has been gradually strengthened. Major landmarks in this gradual strengthening process have been
- the transferral of budget responsibilities during the early 70s,
- the first direct elections in 1979,
- the introduction of the Cooperation procedure with the Single European Act (1986/87) and
- the codecision procedure with the Maastricht Treaty (1993/93), whose scope was expanded considerably by the Treaty of Amsterdam (1997/99) and the Treaty of Nice (2001).
The distinction between European Community (EC) law and European Union law is that based on the treaty structure of the European Union. The European Community constitutes one of the 'three pillars' of the European Union and concerns the social and economic foundations of the single market. The second and the third pillars were created by the Treaty of the European Union (the Maastricht Treaty) and involve Common Security and Defence Policy and Internal Security. Decision making under the second and third pillars is not subject to majority voting at present. The Maastricht Treaty created the Justice and Home Affairs pillar as the third pillar. Subsequently, the Treaty of Amsterdam transferred the areas of illegal immigration, visas, asylum, and judicial co-operation to the European Community (the first pillar). Now Police and Judicial Co-operation in Criminal Matters is the third pillar. Justice and Home Affairs now refers both to the fields that have been transferred to the EC and the third pillar.
Several principles such as subsidiarity, proportionality, the principle of conferral, and the precautionary principle have become prominent in the development of European Union law. Scholars such as Catherine Barnard argue that the Four Freedoms form the substantive law of the EU: free movement of goods, services, capital, and labour within the internal market of the EU.
See also
- European Company Statute
- Community Patent
- Corpus Juris or Acquis
- EU competition law
- Direct effect
- Indirect effect
- Incidental effect
- Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union
- Directive 95/46/EC on the protection of personal data
- Gold-plating
- Maximum harmonisation
- Minimum harmonisation
- Home state regulation
- Host state regulation
- Four Freedoms (European Union)
External links
- [EUR-Lex] - online access to existing and proposed European Union legislation
- [EUR-Lex: Treaties]
- [EU Law Blog]
- [ECJBlog.com, weblog with daily news about the European Court of Justice]
- [EU Law and Russia: analysis]
- [DirittoUE.info - EU Law Blog in italian]
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