The Lisbon Treaty and National Constitutions

Europeanisation and Democratic Implications

ARENA Report 03/09 edited by Carlos Closa explores the Europeanisation of national constitutions and to what extent the model of a constitutional EU is emerging.

ARENA Report 03/2009 (RECON Report No 9)

Carlos Closa (ed.)

The European Union has affected national constitutions. To some extent, this implies a cosmopolitan turn in their content whilst, in parallel, national constitutions have been adopted to protect their core from the expansive tendency of European integration. The Europeanisation of national constitutions supplements and completes the unfinished process of constitutionalisation of the EU. The two processes can be seen as two sides of the same coin.

This report explores how this has happened and to what extent the model of a constitutional EU is emerging. It does so by investigating several topics, such as the Charter of Fundamental Rights, the processes for national ratification of EU Treaties, and the constitutional discourses in the media.

ARENA Report 03/2009 (pdf)

ISBN 978-82-93137-68-9 (online) 978-82-93137-18-4 (print)

Published Apr. 25, 2016 1:00 PM - Last modified July 6, 2022 8:54 AM