What is intergovernmental about the EU's '(new) intergovernmentalist' turn? Evidence from the Eurozone and asylum crises
Source
West European Politics, 44, 4, (2021), pp. 852-872ISSN
Annotation
27 juli 2020
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Methoden
Journal title
West European Politics
Volume
vol. 44
Issue
iss. 4
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 852
Page end
p. 872
Subject
Institute for Management ResearchAbstract
Engaging with recent claims of increased intergovernmental dynamics, this article asks what exactly is intergovernmental about the EU’s major crisis-induced reforms. Drawing on central claims of both New Intergovernmentalism and Liberal Intergovernmentalism, it is demonstrated that the Eurozone reform and the asylum reform differ significantly regarding the role played by the European Council (NI) and the role of institutional expertise provided by supranational actors (LI). While the European Council played a central facilitating role in the Eurozone crisis and worked effectively with the Commission, which provided important technical expertise, expertise in the area of asylum still largely lies with the member states. The Commission therefore acted as a political stakeholder, thus estranging the European Council that subsequently acted as a reform blocker. This article is a first attempt to assess empirically the micro-level foundations of different types of intergovernmentalism and to nuance claims on the weakened role of supranational institutions.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [232014]
- Electronic publications [115251]
- Nijmegen School of Management [18279]
- Open Access publications [82626]
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