This book analyses the informal decision making process in the EU against the background of a gradually emerging European legal order.
Based on extensive multi-archival research in the UK, France, Germany, the Benelux countries and in Community institutions, the book explores the resistance against majority rule under the so-called Luxembourg Compromise of 1966, a European 'soft law' that allowed Member States to invoke 'vital national interests' and to veto legislation. This 'gentlemen's agreement' was never sanctioned or codified. However, as a 'rule of the game' it had a significant impact on the operations of the EU for several decades and became an integral part of the EU's 'consensus' approach. Its underlying rationale is still alive in the present-day EU.
Presenting a deeply revisionist account of European law and politics, the book demonstrates how the Luxembourg arrangement served as a compromise between the Treaty text and political reality, as a counterweight to technocratic ideas, and as a bridge between irreconcilable divides over European unification.
It includes case studies from 1965 - 2000, such as the 'Eurosclerosis' of the 1970s, British exceptionalism as an EU member, the European revival of the mid-1980s, and intergovernmentalism on the verge of negotiating the Maastricht Treaty.
Highly original in its interdisciplinary, comprehensive and archivally-rooted method, the book interrogates the most important and controversial debates about the past, present and future of the European Union.
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Analyses the informal decision making process in the EU against the background of a gradually emerging European legal order.
Part 1: The Gaullist Legacy 196572
1. The Empty Chair Crisis
2. Suspending the Transition to Majority Voting
3. Decision-Making Sociology after the Empty Chair
Part 2: Transition 197278
4. British Accession
5. The Lifting of the Culture of Unanimity in the Mid1970s
6. The Tindemans Report
7. Southern Enlargement
8. The Three Wise Men Report
Part 3: Transformation 197884
9. Reconceptualising the Compromise
10. A Case Law History
11. The Search for Clarification
Part 4: Trade-Off 198486
12. The European Revival of 1984
13. The Dooge Committee and the Reception of its Report
14. The Milan European Council of 1985
15. The Single European Act
Part 5: Towards Maastricht Europe and Beyond 19862016
16. The SEA Ratification Debates
17. The Council Internal Rules of Procedure
18. The Evocability of the Compromise
19. The Maastricht Treaty and the GATT
20. The Compromise in Todays European Union
Philip Bajon is Senior Lecturer in Law at Aston University, Birmingham, UK.