A ‘Minefield of Misreckonings’: Europe’s Constitutional Pluralism

2012 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 119-144
Author(s):  
Emilios Christodoulidis

AbstractThe paper is a critique of ‘constitutional pluralism’, as increasingly called upon to compensate for the social and democratic deficits of the European project, and of ‘constitutionalisation’ as compensating for the absence of any semblance of ‘constituent power’ at the European level. The substitution has been largely successful in redefining the terms of the debate. My interest in this paper, more specifically, is with constitutionalisation as a process of ‘becoming-constitutional’, the conditions of that process, and the criteria of ascription of constitutionality. My argument is that it involves a constitutive coupling with constitutional pluralism, such that allows even the current crisis to be portrayed as an ‘opportunity’ for Europe’s alleged ‘social market economy for the 21st century’ to ‘come out stronger’, its progress at no point obstructed or derailed by the peoples’ of Europe resistance to it.

Author(s):  
Adriana Anamaria Davidescu

Abstract The main objective of the paper was to construct a synthetic measure that can be used as benchmark for measuring the progress toward convergence to the social market economy as specification of the Lisbon Treaty. This kind of approach will enable us to identify the main determinants of the social market economy among EU member states using a principal component analysis technique (PCA) analyzing comparatively different group of countries. The analysis was conducted at the level of the 28 EU countries for the year 2013 using 15 indicators from four categories: efficient market allocation, efficient property rights, economic and ecological sustainability and social inclusion. The empirical results revealed that the key determinants in explaining the social market economy at European level are freedom of contract, open markets, financial stability and effective environmental protection and highlighted Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Estonia and Germany as the main poles of social market economy at European level while at the opposite side Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria registered the smallest level of social market economy. As main contribution brought by the paper there can be mentioned the attempt of measuring the level of social market economy at European level using an aggregate composite index for the level of 2013 highlighting the main poles of social economy.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-98
Author(s):  
Flavio Felice

Abstract What do we mean by “civil” and “civil society”? This paper attempts to describe a complex notion of “civil economy” in Sturzo’s theoretical perspective of the social market economy. According to this political theory, “civil” is not opposed to “market,” which is not opposed to “the political” (the state). Rather, instead of being the transmission belt between the state and market, civil is the galaxy in which we find also the market and the state (but not only), each with its own functions. This tradition – rooted in Christianity – was able to oppose both Nazi and communist totalitarianism, while many Catholics made an impossible attempt to exhume corporatism.


Author(s):  
Rolf H. Funck ◽  
Harry Böttcher ◽  
Jan S. Kowalski

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document