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Treaties of the European Union

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The Treaties of the European Union are effectively the basic constitutional texts of the Union. They set out the objectives of the Union and establish the various institutions which are intended to achieve those aims.

Current treaties

Evolution of the structure and policies of the 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)

Founding treaties

European integration is at present based on four founding treaties:

Amending treaties

At times there have been far-reaching reforms bringing major institutional changes and introducing new areas of responsibility for the European institutions:

Accession treaties

Main article: Enlargement of the European Union

The founding treaties have also been amended (in a more limited fashion) whenever new member states acceded:

Budgetary treaties

Lastly there have been two budgetary treaties:

European Constitution

The European Constitution seeks to consolidate, simplify and replace the existing set of overlapping treaties. It was signed on 29 October 2004 and is due to come into force on 1 November 2006, conditional on its ratification by all member states, many of which are holding a referendum on the issue.

The French, on May 29th 2005, then the Dutch on 1st June 2005 rejected the treaty therefore probably spelling the death of the constitution. If the Constitution fails to be ratified by all member states, the EU will continue to work on the basis of the current treaties as described above.

See also

 


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