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The Constitution of Europe: "Do the New Clothes Have an Emperor?" and Other Essays on European Integration

TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a list of abbreviations for "We will do, and hearken" and "We Will Hearken" for the European legal space.
Abstract
Preface Acknowledgements List of abbreviations Part I. 'We Will Do ...': 1. Introduction: 'We will do, and hearken' 2. The transformation of Europe 3. Fundamental rights and fundamental boundaries: on the conflict of standards and values in the protection of human rights in the European legal space 4. The external legal relations of non-unitary actors: mixity and the federal principle 5. The least-dangerous branch: a retrospective and prospective of the European Court of Justice in the arena of political integration Part II. 'We Will Hearken ...': 6. Introduction: the reformation of European constitutionalism 7. Fin-de-siecle Europe: do the new clothes have an emperor? 8. European democracy and its critics: policy and system 9. The autonomy of the Community legal order: through the looking glass 10. To be a European citizen: Eros and civilisation Index.

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MonographDOI

The rights of others : aliens, residents, and citizens

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reread Kant's cosmopolitan doctrine and the right to have rights and the contradictions of the nation-state in the case of the European Union, and the law of peoples, distributive justice and migrations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Democracy and Legitimacy in the European Union Revisited: Input, Output and ‘Throughput’

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the EU's legitimacy is mainly defined by output effectiveness for the people and input participation by the people, and they define and discuss this third normative criterion as well as the interaction effects of all three normative criteria.
Book

Power and governance in a partially globalized world

TL;DR: From interdependence and institutions to globalization and governance as mentioned in this paper, the concept of legalization has been proposed as an alternative to the Hobbe's Dilemma in international politics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Constructing Polities and Markets: An Institutionalist Account of European Integration

TL;DR: In this article, a theory of European integration focusing on the case of the European Community, the first pillar of the EU, is developed and tested, and the generality of this explanation to a sociology of markets and polity-building projects is discussed in the conclusion.
Journal ArticleDOI

European Demoicracy and Its Crisis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define "demoicracy" as "a Union of peoples, understood both as states and as citizens, who govern together but not as one" and argue that the concept is best understood as a third way, distinct from both national and supranational versions of single demos polities.