Articles for category: English Articles

Rescue Package For Fundamental Rights: Comments by PÁL SONNEVEND

The European Union could not be imagined without respect for fundamental rights by both the EU itself and its member states. It is certainly not possible to define the EU solely on the basis of this, but the respect for fundamental rights belongs to the very core of a European identity, without which no integration would be possible. At the same time, the EU needed 57 years after the establishment of the European Steel and Coal Community to have a legally binding written catalogue of fundamental rights having the rank of a constitutional instrument. No doubt, this hesitation was partly ... continue reading

A Rescue Package for EU Fundamental Rights – Illustrated with Reference to the Example of Media Freedom

By ARMIN VON BOGDANDY, MATTHIAS KOTTMANN, CARLINO ANTPÖHLER, JOHANNA DICKSCHEN, SIMON HENTREI AND MAJA SMRKOLJ Fundamental rights protection, once a side show, has become important for the EU, as proved by the newfound treaty recognition of the EU fundamental rights charter (CFREU), and the upcoming accession to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). At the same time the fundamental rights situation in a considerable number of Member States is an increasing cause for concern. This has mostly been illustrated with reference to minorities and asylum seekers. However, recent reports of organizations like the Council of Europe, the OSCE and ... continue reading

A Rescue Package For Fundamental Rights: An Online Symposium on Verfassungsblog

The constitution of the European Union depends on the fundamental rights situation in EU Member States. Hungary is the latest and most grave example of a EU Member State whose fundamental rights deficiencies are cause for concern. What can the Union do about it? What if treaty violation procedures and political pressure won’t do to get the situation under control? At which point ceases  the problem to be an “internal” issue – in law, in politics? And how can the trap of  massive centralization in the EU be avoided, if one broadens the scope of Union-level fundamental rights protection with ... continue reading

Our new „Fiscal Union“: What Is It All About?

Last week’s EU summit has sent a shock wave through the political world in Europe: Not only seemed the idea of a split in the Union, with UK turning it’s back to the rest of Europe, suddenly to become a reality. But also the much-trumpeted „fiscal union“ among the 17 Euro members plus up to nine of the rest raised a lot of anxious questions: What will the legal quality of that new thing be? How will it relate to the existing Union? Will the European Commission and the European Parliament have a say in it? What are we to ... continue reading