How Upper Levels Strive to Influence Law-Making at the Lower Levels and Why Lower Levels Can’t Have Cake and Eat It

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_3D7F36FEEBBB
Type
A part of a book
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
How Upper Levels Strive to Influence Law-Making at the Lower Levels and Why Lower Levels Can’t Have Cake and Eat It
Title of the book
Lawmaking in Multi-level Settings Legislative Challenges in Federal Systems and the European Union
Author(s)
Schmid Evelyne
Publisher
Hart/Nomos
Publication state
Published
Issued date
17/10/2019
Editor
Popelier Patricia, Xanthaki  Helen, Uhlmann Felix, Silveira  João Tiago, Robinson William
Chapter
2
Pages
43-67
Language
english
Abstract
In this chapter, I ask whether there are commonalities of how various upper levels attempt and often succeed in ensuring legislative implementation at the lower levels and what this means for the complex situation in which domestic legislators find themselves in today’s multi-level settings. I explain the selection of three variants of normative levels that can play the role of upper levels: 1) federal law in a federal country, 2) EU law and 3) public international law and I sketch the argument that all three of these upper levels – through a variety of conceptual manifestations – strive to ensure the effectivity of their legal sources at the lower level. Based on this premise, I then present four groups of mechanisms and instruments that these upper levels employ in order to increase the chances that lower level legislators comply. For each group of approaches, I identify the most common concerns from the perspective of the lower level. The chapter concludes with some reflections on this state of affairs and its relationship with the current backlash against international and regional law.
Create date
22/08/2018 14:36
Last modification date
27/04/2021 7:09
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