Enhancing Political Representation Through the European Economic Constitution? Regressive Politics of Democratic Inclusion




Jussi Jaakkola

PublisherCambridge University Press

2019

European Constitutional Law Review

EuConst

15

2

194

219

26

1574-0196

1744-5515

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1017/S1574019619000105(external)

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-constitutional-law-review/all-issues(external)



Interrelation between economic and political dimensions of constitutionalism – European market integration and erosion of democratic representation within Member States of the EU – Regulatory externalities between national democracies – European market citizenship and its ramifications for democratically legitimate exercise of the power to tax – Underinclusiveness of domestic democratic process – Political representation beyond the state – European economic constitution as a source of political empowerment and the EU economic freedoms as political rights – The European Court of Justice as a protector of representation – Reinforcing political participation through regulatory competition – European market freedoms enhance representation but at the expense of political equality – Economic freedoms as insufficient means of political empowerment – Improving democratic representation and equality beyond the state requires properly political citizenship instead of mere market rights.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:23