Citizen participation and the Lisbon Treaty : A legal perspective

Détails

Ressource 1Télécharger: BIB_C235EC90A9DF.P001.pdf (241.91 [Ko])
Etat: Public
Version: de l'auteur⸱e
ID Serval
serval:BIB_C235EC90A9DF
Type
Rapport: document publié par une institution, habituellement élément d'une série.
Sous-type
Working paper: document de travail dans lequel l'auteur présente les résultats de ses travaux de recherche. Les working papers ont pour but de stimuler les discussions scientifiques avec les milieux intéressés et servent de base pour la publication d'articles dans des revues spécialisées.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Citizen participation and the Lisbon Treaty : A legal perspective
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Maiani F.
Détails de l'institution
University of Aberdeen
ISBN
0140-8240
Date de publication
2011
Numéro
484
Genre
Studies in Public Policy
Langue
anglais
Nombre de pages
24
Résumé
How to "bring the [European] Union closer to its citizens" is a vexed and vital problem of European integration. Article 11 TEU on participatory democracy, recently introduced by the Lisbon Treaty, is meant to be part of the solution. The EU Economic and Social Committee has gone so far as to define this provision "a milestone on the road to a people's Europe that is real and feasible". This appears to be an overly optimistic assessment - partly because art. 11 relies heavily on the involvement of civil society organisations, which political science literature suggests is conceptually and/or practically irrelevant to citizen involvement; partly because it largely formalizes participatory practices that have been in existence for years without cognizable effects on citizen participation; and partly because even its most innovative element - the European citizens' initiative (ECI) - does not bring significant changes to the Union's constitutional arrangements in terms of redistributing decision-making power. In addition to that, secondary legislation places significant hurdles on the submission of ECIs and might prevent or delay their becoming a standard democratic practice. This is not to say that art. 11 TEU has no potential at all. Its insertion in the Treaty might provide impetus to rethink and develop past participatory practices, such as horizontal civil dialogue. Moreover, the effects of "popular input" in the form of ECIs on EU institutional dynamics is as yet unknown - and perhaps not negligible, to judge from the keen interest that the European Parliament and other bodies have demonstrated in "appropriating" it as a political asset. Finally, art. 11 raises the stakes of the Union's democratic challenge and might pressure EU institutions to make full use of its potential. Or, if eventually proved inadequate, art. 11 might constitute a constitutional experiment on the way to meaningful forms of direct democracy at EU level.
Mots-clé
European Union, citizens, participatory democracy, civil dialogue, European citizens' initiative, direct democracy, Treaty of Lisbon
Création de la notice
28/09/2014 19:44
Dernière modification de la notice
20/08/2019 16:37
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