Subsidiarity and Self-Interest: Federalism at the European Court of Justice

Q1 Social Sciences
E. Swaine
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引用次数: 33

Abstract

Subsidiarity is the principle which the European Community has begun applying to consider whether federal legislation is necessary, or whether action by the Member States will suffice. This article considers whether subsidiarity should constrain the Court of Justice's jurisprudence as well. It begins by analyzing the federalism problems posed by the Court's case law concerning remedies for the violation of Community law, in particular the doctrine holding Member States liable in damages for failing properly to implement Community directives. After concluding that the Court is required to review this jurisprudence for consistency with the subsidiarity principle, and that the Court's existing compensation and rights-centered rationale is largely insufficient, the article develops a two-fold argument for sustaining Member State liability even under the subsidiarity principle: such liability is essential to deterring Member State cheating on implementation, and encourages the development of directives that delegate rather than precisely prescribe regulatory content. The article concludes by describing possible modifications to prevailing liability doctrine in order to render it more consistent with the subsidiarity and proportionality principles.
辅助与自利:欧洲法院的联邦制
辅助原则是欧洲共同体在考虑联邦立法是否必要或成员国的行动是否足够时已开始适用的原则。本文探讨了辅助性是否也应该约束法院的法理。本文首先分析了法院关于对违反共同体法的补救办法的判例法所造成的联邦制问题,特别是认为成员国对未能适当执行共同体指令负有损害赔偿责任的理论。在得出法院需要审查这一判例以符合辅助原则,以及法院现有的赔偿和以权利为中心的理由在很大程度上是不够的结论之后,文章提出了一个双重论点,即即使在辅助原则下也维持会员国的责任:这种责任对于阻止会员国在执行方面作弊至关重要,并鼓励制定授权而不是精确规定管制内容的指令。文章最后描述了对现行责任原则可能作出的修改,以使其更符合辅助原则和比例原则。
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
Harvard International Law Journal
Harvard International Law Journal Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
期刊介绍: In an opinion survey published in The International Lawyer, senior scholars in the international and comparative law fields ranked the Harvard International Law Journal as having the “strongest academic reputation” of all student-edited international and comparative law specialty journals published in the United States. The ILJ publishes articles on international, comparative, and foreign law, the role of international law in U.S. courts, and the international ramifications of U.S. domestic law. These articles are written by the most prominent scholars and practitioners in the field and have been recognized as important contributions to the development of international law.
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