The accession of eight post-communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe (and also of Malta and Cyprus) to the European Union in 2004 has been heralded as perhaps the most important development in the history of European integration so far. While the impact of the enlargement on the constitutional structures and practices of the EU has already generated a rich scholarly literature, the influence of the accession on constitutionalism, democracy, human rights and the rule of law among the new member states has been largely ignored. This book fills this gap, and addresses the question of the consequences of the ‘external force’ of European enlargement upon the understanding and practice of democracy and the rule of law and among both the main legal-political actors and the general public in the new member-states. A number of leading legal scholars, sociologists and political scientists, both from Central and Eastern Europe and from outside, address these issues in a systematic and critical way. Taken together, these essays help answer a fundamental question: does the European Union have the potential of promoting and consolidate democracy and human rights?
Inhoudsopgave
Democratic Institutions and Practices.- EU Enlargement and Democracy in New Member States.- The Eastern EU Enlargement and the Janus-headed Nature of the Constitutional Treaty.- A Problem of their Own, Solutions of their Own: CEE Jurisdictions and the Problems of Lustration and Retroactivity.- Citizens and Foreigners in the Enlarged Europe.- Sub-National Governance in Central and Eastern Europe: Between Transition and Europeanization.- The Copenhagen Criteria and the Evolution of Popular Consent to EU Norms: From Legality to Normative Justifiability in Poland and the Czech Republic.- Constitutionalism.- Becoming “Europeans”: The Impact of EU “Constitutionalism” on Post-Communist Pre-Modernity.- Happy Returns to Europe? The Union’s Identity, Constitution-Making, and its Impact on the Central European Accession States.- An Evolutionary Approach to the Constitutionalism of an Enlarged EU: Why will Cognitive and Cultural Boundaries Matter?.- Constitutional Tolerance and EU Enlargement: The Politics of Dissent?.- Europeanization Through Judicial Activism? The Hungarian Constitutional Court’s Legitimacy and the “Return to Europe”.- The Rule of Law.- Barbarians ante portas or the Post-Communist Rule of Law in Post-Democratic European Union.- Transformation and Integration of Legal Cultures and Discourses—Poland.- EU Enlargement and the Constitutional Principle of Judicial Independence.- Post-Communist Legal Orders and the Roma: Some Implications for EU Enlargement.- A Europe of Variable Geometry: Still a Winning Model?.- Concluding Remarks.- Conclusions: The Adhesion of New Member States to the European Union and the European Constitution.