Article

The absence of political constitutionalism in the EU: three models for enhancing constitutional agency

Details

Citation

Glencross A (2014) The absence of political constitutionalism in the EU: three models for enhancing constitutional agency. Journal of European Public Policy, 21 (8), pp. 1163-1180. https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2014.909871

Abstract
This article argues that EU constitutionalization has taken place in the absence of political constitutionalism. This concept is defined as the ability of citizens and member states to act as ongoing constitutional agents in determining the evolution of individual rights and national prerogatives. A historical comparison with Swiss and American constitutional development is used to show the development of two forms of political constitutionalism: respectively, direct democracy and presidentialization. These mechanisms allowed territorial units and citizens to influence major constitutional debate outside parliamentary channels. However, attempts to replicate these forms of political constitutionalism in the EU are impractical and undesirable because they fail to respect the political equality of member states and citizens. A more promising avenue is the development of ‘politicization' by providing an opportunity to oppose EU policies via national parliaments and civil society. Indeed, engendering constitutional agency can create a novel democratic bond across demoi.

Keywords
Direct democracy;EU constitutionalization;legitimacy;political constitutionalism;politicization;presidentialization

Journal
Journal of European Public Policy: Volume 21, Issue 8

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2014
Publication date online04/2014
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/20834
PublisherTaylor and Francis
ISSN1350-1763
eISSN1466-4429