欧盟治理的分层合法性与政治化

V. Schmidt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

第3章探讨了欧盟“分级”合法性的困境,即产出和吞吐量主要在欧盟层面运作,而投入主要在国家层面运作,然后考察了政治化对国家和欧盟层面的影响。本章首先考虑了欧盟的合法性问题,这些问题源于其治理活动的碎片化,政策和程序主要位于欧盟层面,而政治仍然是国家层面。虽然随着时间的推移,欧盟在提高这三个方面的合法性方面取得了很大的成功,但它也面临着合法性方面的重大挑战。在欧元区危机中,公民对欧盟合法性的感觉受到了影响,尽管他们与欧盟相关的身份认同可能没有受到影响。接下来,这一章重点讨论了欧盟面临的最大挑战——欧盟治理的政治化。在简要描述了欧盟技术官僚治理长期以来的非政治化之后,本节认为,欧盟的政治化不仅在底层增加,如主流政党的削弱有利于民粹主义挑战者,或自下而上,如国家政治影响欧盟行为体,而且在顶层,欧盟行为体变得更加政治化。本章利用关于谁负责或控制欧盟治理的辩论来展示学者们如何通过政府间主义、超国家主义和议会主义的“新”或传统版本来捍卫“他们的”行动者,实际上展示了欧盟日益增长的政治互动动态。本章以这样一个问题结束:这种政治化是好事还是坏事?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Split-Level Legitimacy and Politicization in EU Governance
Chapter 3 explores the dilemmas of the EU’s “split-level” legitimacy, where output and throughput operate primarily at the EU level and input at the national, and then examines the impact of politicization on both national and EU levels. The chapter begins by considering the EU’s legitimacy problems stemming from the fragmentation of its governing activities, with policies and processes located mainly at the EU level while politics remains national. While the EU has been largely successful in improving legitimacy in all three categories over time, it has faced major challenges to legitimacy. In the Eurozone crisis, citizens’ sense of EU legitimacy has suffered even if their EU-related identity may not have. The chapter then focuses on the EU’s biggest challenge, the politicization of EU governance. After briefly describing the longstanding depoliticization of EU technocratic governance, this section argues that the EU’s politicization has been increasing not only at the bottom, as evidenced by the weakening of mainstream parties to the benefit of populist challengers, or from the bottom up, as national politics influences EU actors, but also at the top, where EU actors have become more politicized. The chapter uses the debates about who is in charge or control of EU governance to show how scholars’ defense of “their” actor through “new” or traditional versions of intergovernmentalism, supranationalism, and parliamentarism actually demonstrates the EU’s increasingly political dynamics of interaction. This chapter ends with the question: Is such politicization a good thing or a bad thing?
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