Informal Politics, Formalised Law and the ‘Social Deficit’ of European Integration: Reflections after the Judgments of the ECJ in Viking and Laval

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Informal Politics, Formalised Law and the ‘Social Deficit’ of European Integration: Reflections after the Judgments of the ECJ in Viking and Laval
Abstract
The judgments of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) of December 2008 in Viking and Laval on the compatibility of national collective labour law with European prerogatives have caused quite a heated critical debate. This article seeks to put this debate in constitutional perspectives. In its first part, it reconstructs in legal categories what Fritz W. Scharpf has characterised as a decoupling of economic integration from the various welfare traditions of the Member States. European constitutionalism, it is submitted, is bound to respond to this problématique. The second part develops a perspective within which such a response can be found. That perspective is a supranational European conflict of laws which seeks to realise what the draft Constitutional Treaty had called the ‘motto of the union’: unitas in pluralitate. Within that framework, the third part analyses two seemingly contradictory trends, namely, first, albeit very briefly, the turn to ‘soft’ modes of governance in the realm of social policy and then, in much greater detail, the ECJ's ‘hard’ interpretations of the supremacy of European freedoms and its strict interpretation of pertinent secondary legislation. The conflict-of-laws approach would suggest a greater respect for national autonomy, in particular, in view of the limited EU competences in the field of labour law.
Publication
European Law Journal
Volume
15
Issue
1
Pages
1-19
Date
January 1, 2009
Language
English
ISSN
1468-0386
Short Title
Informal Politics, Formalised Law and the ‘Social Deficit’ of European Integration
Accessed
2017-03-14, 3:10 p.m.
Library Catalog
Wiley Online Library
Citation
Joerges, Christian, and Florian Rödl. 2009. “Informal Politics, Formalised Law and the ‘Social Deficit’ of European Integration: Reflections after the Judgments of the ECJ in Viking and Laval.” European Law Journal 15 (1): 1–19. DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0386.2008.00448.x.
Publication year
Keywords
  • BLOCK, Fred
  • economic law
  • European constitutionalism
  • European Union
  • labour law
  • social embeddedness

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