The Council of the EU is a powerful institution whose centrality has been challenged by the Treaty of Lisbon. More than ten years after this major institutional revision, this book examines its role within the EU political regime and its interactions with other institutions. It explores how the Council Presidency has navigated major crises over the past decade and addressed internal challenges. The various chapters discuss key timely questions: How has the relationship between the Council and the European Council evolved over time? To what extent have the recent crises reshaped the relationship between the Council and the European Parliament, as well as its interactions with the Commission? Is the Council Presidency still a powerful mediator? What are its internal challenges? What are the prospects for the rotating presidency system? 
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The Council of the EU is a powerful institution whose centrality has been challenged by the Treaty of Lisbon. The various chapters discuss key timely questions: How has the relationship between the Council and the European Council evolved over time?
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Chapter 1: Introduction: The Council Presidency in EU studies: what have we learned and what has changed in the decade of crises?.- Chapter 2: Theorising the presidency of the Council.- Chapter 3. The legal regime applicable to the Council Presidency: competing conceptual approaches and pragmatic solutions.- Chapter 4. The Procedural Legacy of Two Years of Covid-19 pandemic. How the Temporary Modification of the Council’s Rules of Procedure Became Permanent.- Chapter 5. The 2009 transition from the rotating to the permanent presidency of the European Council.- Chapter 6. The European Council and the rotating EU Council Presidency: patterns of cooperation and rivalry beyond the formal treaty rules.- Chapter 7.From mediator to crisis manager: evolving relationship between the Council Presidencies and the European Parliament in times of crisis.- Chapter 8. The Commission is always ready to help’: the ambiguous relationship between the European Commission and the Council Presidency in the Ordinary Legislative Procedure.- Chapter 9. Presiding in the shadows. The rotating Council Presidencies as structures of opportunity for the legitimization of the European Union.- Chapter 10. Still the Dealmaker? The Council Presidency in EMU Michele Chang and Raquel Ugarte Díez.- Chapter 11. Article 7 TEU on the agendas of the Council’s rotating presidencies: Still a “nuclear option” or rather “a talking shop”?.- Chapter 12. How does the Council legitimise the EU’s response to international crises? Emotion Discourse Analysis of the High Representative’s communications on Russia’s war of aggression.- Chapter 13. Does the Presidency of the Council still have the means to achieve its ambitions? The French Presidency 2022 and the promotion of EU sovereignty.- Chapter 14. Rotating Presidencies, Rotating Sponsors? Corporate Sponsorship of the Presidencies of the Council of the EU under Scrutiny.- Chapter 15. Conclusion. The rotating presidency of the Council: a major actorof the EU that is here to stay.
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“The authors demonstrate that the Council of the European Union, though imperfect and undoubtedly impervious to reform, manages to strike a balance between national interests and the need for supranational action.”-Jean-Paul Jacqué, Honorary Director General, Council of the EU, Emeritus Professor of EU Law at the University of Strasbourg, France  “EU Council Presidencies in Times of Crises is a highly topical and welcome publication and merits the attention of all those who want to understand the EU.”-Jim Cloos, TEPSA Secretary-General, Former Senior EU Civil Servant “EU Council Presidencies in Times of Crisis is required reading for anyone interested in European institutions.” -Sabine Saurugger, Professor of Political Science, Director of Sciences Po Grenoble, FranceThe Council of the EU is a powerful institution whose centrality has been challenged by the Treaty of Lisbon. More than ten years after this major institutional revision, this book examines its role within the EU political regime and its interactions with other institutions. It explores how the Council Presidency has navigated major crises over the past decade and addressed internal challenges. The various chapters discuss key timely questions: How has the relationship between the Council and the European Council evolved over time? To what extent have the recent crises reshaped the relationship between the Council and the European Parliament, as well as its interactions with the Commission? Is the Council Presidency still a powerful mediator? What are its internal challenges? What are the prospects for the rotating presidency system? Ramona Coman is Professor in Political Science at the Université libre de Bruxelles, member of the CEVIPOL and Emeritus President of the Institut d’études européennes, Belgium.Olivier Costa is Research Professor at the CNRS, CEVIPOF, Sciences Po (Paris), France. He is also Director of European Political and Governance Studies at the College of Europe (Bruges), Belgium. Vivien Sierens is a Belgian diplomat. Holder of a PhD in political and social sciences (ULB & VUB), he is also an associate researcher at the Université libre de Bruxelles (CEVIPOL), Belgium.
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The Council of the European Union is still largely unknown, and the interest of this book is to present in all its aspects an institution whose intergovernmental composition does not prevent it from creating among its members both a sense of common belonging and the need to act in the collective interest. The authors demonstrate that the Council of the European Union, though imperfect and undoubtedly impervious to reform, manages to strike a balance between national interests and the need for supranational action. —Jean-Paul Jacqué, Honorary Directr General, Council of the EU, Emeritus Professor of EU Law at the University of Strasbourg, France.‘EU Council Presidencies in times of crises’, edited by Ramona Coman, Olivier Costa, and Vivien Sierens, gathers the contributions of 14 leading experts (academics and practitioners) on the Council and its Presidencies: the least studied of the EU institutions but a central one, nonetheless. It is a highly topical and welcome publication and merits the attention of all those who want to understand the EU. The various articles present the huge advantage of both providing a cogent analysis of the structure and functioning of the Council and  of describing the Council in its interaction with the other EU institutions. The secret of the EU’s success lies in the fact that none of the institutions can achieve anything without the concourse of the other institutions: the European Council, since the Lisbon treaty chaired by a full-time President, which sets the overall direction of the EU and has been the key driver of European integration since its creation almost 50 years ago in 1974, the Commission with its central roles of proposing legislation and  ensuring the respect of EU law under the ultimate control of the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg, and the directly elected EP, which has over the years developed into the EU’s legislative co-decision authority alongside the Council.  This institutional set-up reflects the nature of the EU as a union of States and peoples.  With the exceptions of the FAC and the Eurogroup, Council formations are chaired by the rotating Presidency. As remarked in several contributions, this is a somewhat awkward system with some drawbacks in terms of continuity, visibility, and continuity. But the point is also made that it is a system that has many advantages in terms of legitimacy and ownership of Member States; and above it, it delivers on the whole. It is rightly said that no Presidency over the past years has ‘failed’; the reason for this is that the rotating Presidency is part of a sophisticated system with many checks and balances, and which simply does not allow it to fail! It is proper to think about possible reforms, as some of the experts do, but the editors in their conclusion rightly point out that the rotating Presidency is here to stay and that there is no appetite among the MemberStates to abolish it. Lastly, the book provides fascinating insights into the ‘hidden’ roles of the Committee of Permanent Representatives and the General Secretariat of the Council in keeping the ship afloat and making it work. The editors and authors deserve our recognition for a most timely initiative and a well-researched and intelligent foray into the structure and functioning of the Council and its links with the other institutions.  —Jim Cloos,TEPSA Secretary-General,Former Senior EU civil servant.   EU Council Presidencies in Times of Crisis" is required reading for anyone interested in European institutions. Its authors take a resolutely dynamic view on the EU Council Presidencies: the reasons for their transformation over time, the increase of their influence on EU politics, and its role in the crisis situations the EU has encountered since the Lisbon Treaty. The EU Council is analysed in context - not only the institution as such but how it interacts with other actors in the EU realm." —Sabine Saurugger,Professor of political science,Director of Sciences Po Grenoble, France.
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Examines under-research angles of change looking at the transformation of the Council in a dynamic fashion Proposes an interdisciplinary approach to analyze Council presidency of the EU Focuses on interaction between formal and informal structures, on the impact of contextual and environmental variables
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783031447877
Publisert
2024-05-31
Utgiver
Vendor
Palgrave Macmillan
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Biographical note

Ramona Coman is Professor in Political Science at the Université libre de Bruxelles, member of the CEVIPOL and Emeritus President of the Institut d’études européennes, Belgium.

Olivier Costa is Research Professor at the CNRS, CEVIPOF, Sciences Po (Paris), France.

 

Vivien Sierens is a Belgian diplomat. Holder of a PhD in political and social sciences (ULB & VUB), he is also an associate researcher at the Université libre de Bruxelles (CEVIPOL), Belgium.