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Wednesday, 22 February 2017 - 1.00pm
Location: 
Faculty of Law, B16

Professor Floris de Witte (LSE) will give a CELS lunchtime seminar - "Institutionalising Interdependence".

The history of European integration has been a history of managing interdependence between the Member States. The ‘long history’ of European integration suggests that interdependence between states was primarily understood as something that could be overcome through the creation of institutions. The ‘integration through law’ project, likewise, understood interdependence to be central to the integration process. Rather than seeing it as an institutional question, however, integration through law employs interdependence as a justification for the way in which it has depoliticised the process of integration. Finally, in the last decades on integration, it appears that the creation of ‘ever further interdependence’ has been an explicit objective of European integration.

The history of European integration has also been a history of ever greater contestation of the EU’s authority – culminating, of course, in Brexit. This can be explained by the partial nature of EU law (which is more sensitive to individual than communal values), and by the extension of EU competences into redistributive domains. EU law, as such, more and more often dictates the answer to salient political questions. If anything, then, contestation such as Brexit confirms the suspicion held by many commentators that the way we manage interdependence in the EU does not stabilise but destabilises the integration process itself. European integration, in other words, does not tame the externalities of interdependence, but multiplies them.

This paper will look at different ways in which interdependence could be internalised in ways that are more sensitive to different visions of ‘the good’.

The talk will take place at 1:05pm – 1:55pm in lecture room B16, Faculty of Law.
A sandwich lunch is provided at 12:45pm.
There is no charge for lunch or to attend the seminar.

Enquiries to: cels@law.cam.ac.uk

 

Centre for European Legal Studies

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