Justice in the EU

The Emergence of Transnational Solidarity

Floris de Witte author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:9th Jul '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Justice in the EU cover

In Justice in the EU: The Emergence of Transnational Solidarity, Floris de Witte argues that European Union law can be understood as an instrument for the elaboration of what justice is, means, and requires on the level beyond the nation state. Approaching the question of justice from the European perspective, however, challenges us to think beyond the contractarian idea that equates justice with national political self-determination. A proper model of justice demands a tiered institutional and normative understanding of justice, involving both the nation state and the EU, which can make sense of the new ties between individual citizens that the process of European integration continues to generate. It also requires that we construct a theory of transnational solidarity that can explain what those new ties tell us about our transnational obligations of justice. This book tackles three issues in turn. It explains which precise institutional and normative structures are indispensable in the pursuit of justice; how the European Union can be understood to increase our capacity for the attainment of justice; and formulates a theory of transnational solidarity that informs the interaction between national and European spheres. Three different types of transnational solidarity are identified and carefully traced throughout the case law of the Court of Justice: market solidarity, communitarian solidarity, and aspirational solidarity. Read together, these three transnational solidarities tell us exactly what justice means in the EU.

De Witte's book is a thought-provoking and important contribution. * Malcolm Ross, Reviews & Critical Commentary *
What are the legal, political, economic, and moral limits of European solidarity? Floris de Witte's book, Justice in the EU: The Emergence of Transnational Solidarity tackles these difficult questions from an innovative perspective. Instead of focussing on solidarity between Member States, the book explores the way in which European integration and EU law reshape the relationship between citizens. By understanding justice as a relational commitment between citizens that stand in a particular relationship to each other, de Witte interestingly introduces interpersonal claims of solidarity based on relational interactions as a useful method for capturing cosmopolitan dynamics within the structures of the nation state. * Anastasia Poulou, European Journal of Legal Studies *

ISBN: 9780198724346

Dimensions: 240mm x 169mm x 21mm

Weight: 540g

252 pages