Understanding EU legal integration/disintegration: in search of new perspectives

Diamond Ashiagbor, Salvatore Barilla, Jacob van de Beeten, Monika Brusenbauch Meislová, Hugo Canihac, Xuechen Chen, Paul Copeland, Elaine Fahey, Massimo Fichera, Xinchuchu Gao, Giulia Gentile, Danai Petropoulou Ionescu, Giulio Kowalski, Luigi Lonardo, Mikael Rask Madsen, Michal Ovádek, Amanda Perry-Kessaris, Konstantinos Alexandris Polomarkakis, Dagmar Schiek, Fabien TerpanAdrienne Yong, Rebecca Zahn, Jan Zglinski

Research output: Working paper

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Abstract

This report summarises the UACES/ James Madison Trust EUFutures Research Network Launch Workshop entitled 'Understanding legal integration/disintegration: in search of new perspectives'. The event consisted of four panels on 'Interdisciplinary research on EU law', 'Research Methods and EU law', 'Understanding the EU's integration processes' and 'Understanding EU law through soft law, discourse, ideas & beliefs', respectively. The future of EU legal integration is at a significant juncture with the departure of the UK, substantial rule of law challenges, internal and external crises, and an increasingly apathetic multilateral legal order. There is increased recognition amongst EU lawyers, who have historically limited themselves to doctrinal analysis and legal hermeneutics, that methodology plays an essential role in order to understand EU integration and shape its future. The question remains though how to connect interdisciplinary approaches to EU law, policy and politics. How should EU law (as an object) be studied? What are the respective merits of each discipline (political science, sociology, economy, history) in explaining the way EU law is created, applied, used, transformed in the process of EU integration? What is the added value of bringing together different approaches to law? In particular, how can EU law (as an academic discipline) open itself up to the methods of the social sciences and what, in return, can law offer to our understanding of EU studies more widely? In order to answer these questions, EUFutures brings together scholars for this workshop to: reflect on the future methodological direction(s) of EU law and EU integration and consider both how law could open itself up to methodologies from other disciplines, and what legal analysis could offer political, economic and historical approaches.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationLondon
Number of pages22
Publication statusSubmitted - 9 Jan 2023

Publication series

NameCLS Working Paper Series
PublisherCity University of London

Keywords

  • EU law
  • EU studies
  • European integration
  • integration
  • interdisciplinary
  • methodology
  • CJEU
  • economic sociology of EU law
  • empirical approaches to EU law
  • policy

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