The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?

Conventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the European Court of Justice, though its judgments and judicial practices has ‘constitutionalised’ the EC Treaty, reformatting an intergovernmental bargain into a federal legal order. Many accounts have pr...

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Main Author: Jo Hunt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law 2007-12-01
Series:Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/31
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author Jo Hunt
author_facet Jo Hunt
author_sort Jo Hunt
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description Conventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the European Court of Justice, though its judgments and judicial practices has ‘constitutionalised’ the EC Treaty, reformatting an intergovernmental bargain into a federal legal order. Many accounts have presented the Court as the heroic champion of integration, pushing the integrationist agenda forward when political channels are blocked, and integration through political and legislative means stalled. This article considers whether, in the period following the rejection of the formal constitutionalisation project, it is appropriate to look to the Court to step in and continue the drive towards further, deeper integration, and to further develop and entrench its own constitutional role. It is argued that such a view should not be too readily accepted, as it could be seen as affording too great a respect for the rhetoric of judicial constitutionalisation, which is presented as both fallacious and unhelpful, and as affording insufficient recognition of the realities of the Court’s role as a legal institutional actor operating within a complex context in which it has limited autonomy. The paper reviews existing academic assessments of the constitutionalising role of the Court, before considering the significance of the recently proposed Treaty changes to the role and position of the Court, which leads to a consideration of the limited prospects for continued judicial ‘constitutionalisation’ in the future.
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spelling doaj.art-31df23067ed14c7f9119f44ce303fc992022-12-21T23:40:00ZengUniversity of Zagreb, Faculty of LawCroatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy1845-56621848-99582007-12-01313515610.3935/cyelp.03.2007.31The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?Jo Hunt0Cardiff Law SchoolConventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the European Court of Justice, though its judgments and judicial practices has ‘constitutionalised’ the EC Treaty, reformatting an intergovernmental bargain into a federal legal order. Many accounts have presented the Court as the heroic champion of integration, pushing the integrationist agenda forward when political channels are blocked, and integration through political and legislative means stalled. This article considers whether, in the period following the rejection of the formal constitutionalisation project, it is appropriate to look to the Court to step in and continue the drive towards further, deeper integration, and to further develop and entrench its own constitutional role. It is argued that such a view should not be too readily accepted, as it could be seen as affording too great a respect for the rhetoric of judicial constitutionalisation, which is presented as both fallacious and unhelpful, and as affording insufficient recognition of the realities of the Court’s role as a legal institutional actor operating within a complex context in which it has limited autonomy. The paper reviews existing academic assessments of the constitutionalising role of the Court, before considering the significance of the recently proposed Treaty changes to the role and position of the Court, which leads to a consideration of the limited prospects for continued judicial ‘constitutionalisation’ in the future.https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/31european court of justiceconstitutionalisation of eu lawtreaty changeslegal scholarship
spellingShingle Jo Hunt
The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?
Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
european court of justice
constitutionalisation of eu law
treaty changes
legal scholarship
title The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?
title_full The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?
title_fullStr The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?
title_full_unstemmed The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?
title_short The End of Judicial Constitutionalisation?
title_sort end of judicial constitutionalisation
topic european court of justice
constitutionalisation of eu law
treaty changes
legal scholarship
url https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/31
work_keys_str_mv AT johunt theendofjudicialconstitutionalisation
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