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Intergovernmentalism and Its Limits Assessing the European Union’s Answer to the Euro Crisis

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TLDR
In the context of an existential challenge, the intergovernmental approach faced a structural difficulty in solving basic dilemmas of collective action as discussed by the authors, and the euro crisis has thus represented a test for the validity of the inter-governmental constitution of the Lisbon Treaty.
Abstract
The Lisbon Treaty has institutionalized a dual constitution, supranational in the single market’s policies and intergovernmental in (among others) economic and financial policies. The extremely complex system of economic governance set up for answering the euro crisis has been defined and implemented on the basis of the intergovernmental constitution of the EU. The euro crisis has thus represented a test for the validity of the intergovernmental constitution of the Lisbon Treaty. Although the measures adopted in the period 2010-2012, consisting of legislative decisions and new intergovernmental treaties, are of an unprecedented magnitude, they were nevertheless unable to promote effective and legitimate solutions for dealing with the financial crisis. In the context of an existential challenge, the intergovernmental approach faced a structural difficulty in solving basic dilemmas of collective action.

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Citations
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The financial crisis and the European Parliament: An analysis of the Two-Pack legislation.

TL;DR: The evidence indicates that left–right division is dominant in the informal stage preceding committee debates, while both the pro-/anti-European Union and the left/right dimensions matter during the committee stage, whereas for plenary votes, the pro,/anti,European Union dimension is crucial.
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Authority Under Construction: The European Union in Comparative Political Perspective

TL;DR: This paper argued that the EU today is better understood as a polity in formation, generalizable through the lens of comparative politics instead of international relations, with particular attention to the role of culture and identity in shoring up, or contesting, political authority.
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With and without supranationalisation: the post-Lisbon roles of the European Council and the Council in justice and home affairs governance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the active role of the European Council in setting the JHA agenda and the continuous centrality of JHA Council in decision-making, and demonstrate an important blend of supranationalisation and intergovernmentalisation in po...
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Red Europe versus no Europe? The impact of attitudes towards the EU and the economic crisis on radical-left voting

TL;DR: The 2014 European Parliament election saw a relatively large increase in the size of radical-left parties (RLPs) particularly in Western Europe as mentioned in this paper, and it is argued that the Europeanisation of economic issues during the financial crisis, together with the particular kind of Euroscepticism advocated by these parties, have enabled them to successfully attract a heterogeneous pool of voters.
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Ideational power and pathways to legitimation in the euro crisis

TL;DR: This paper investigated the role of European Union institutional actors in building, defending, or undermining the legitimacy of crisis management during the euro crisis and found that institutional actors sought to build, defend or undermine the legitimacy during the crisis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Europe's deliberative intergovernmentalism: the role of the Council and European Council in EU economic governance

TL;DR: The European Council has emerged as the centre of political gravity in the field of economic governance as mentioned in this paper, and the Eurogroup fulfils a crucial role as forums for policy debate, which is the reflection of an integration paradox inherent to the post-Maastricht EU.
Book

Ruling Europe: The Politics of the Stability and Growth Pact

TL;DR: Juncke as mentioned in this paper discusses the past, present and future of the Stability and Growth Pact and its implications for European integration theory, including the role of experts and ideas in good and bad times.
Journal ArticleDOI

New modes of governance, the Open Method of Co-ordination and other fashionable red herring

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the Open Method of Co-ordination (OMC) is a red herring that distracts attention from the more important and pervasive increase in the formality and judicialisation of EU policy making.
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