Disciplining Member States: EU Loyalty in External Relations

Q1 Social Sciences
C. Eckes
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract This Article argues that the cooperation obligations of the Member States under EU law are best understood as forming part of an overall duty of EU loyalty and elaborates on the consequences of framing it in this way. EU loyalty legally requires Member States to make the common EU interest their own. The Article further demonstrates that EU loyalty is more relevant and more stringently applied in EU external relations than within the EU legal order. Loyalty obligations of the Member States reach into the future, extend to hypothetical situations, and are at a comparatively high level of abstraction aimed to protect the Union's ability to act effectively on the international plane. This limits Member States’ margin of manoeuvre, including when they take unilateral external action within the realm of their retained national competences. The Article explains that this may be functionally justified by the high stakes of non-concerted external action. However, and in particular with the EU's increased external powers and the ever-growing relevance of international cooperation, the stringent application of cooperation requirements should be (better) explicated and justified.
约束成员国:欧盟对外关系中的忠诚
本文认为,欧盟法律下成员国的合作义务最好被理解为构成对欧盟忠诚的整体义务的一部分,并详细阐述了以这种方式构建合作义务的后果。对欧盟的忠诚在法律上要求成员国将欧盟的共同利益作为自己的利益。本文进一步论证了欧盟忠诚在欧盟对外关系中比在欧盟法律秩序中更具有相关性和更严格的适用。成员国的忠诚义务延伸到未来,延伸到假设的情况,并且处于相对较高的抽象水平,旨在保护联盟在国际层面上有效行动的能力。这限制了会员国的回旋余地,包括它们在保留的国家权限范围内采取单方面对外行动的余地。文章解释说,这可能在功能上被非协调一致的外部行动的高风险所证明。然而,特别是随着欧盟外部力量的增加和国际合作的相关性日益增强,应该(更好地)阐明和证明严格适用合作要求是合理的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
期刊介绍: The Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies (CYELS) offers authors and readers a space for sustained reflection and conversation about the challenges facing Europe and the diverse legal contexts in which those challenges are addressed. It identifies European Legal Studies as a broad field of legal enquiry encompassing not only European Union law but also the law emanating from the Council of Europe; comparative European public and private law; and national law in its interaction with European legal sources. The Yearbook is a publication of the Centre for European Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge.
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