Eric Stein Working Paper No 1/2010
Gareth Davies
Constitutional Disagreement in Europe and the search for Pluralism
Cite as:
Gareth Davies, "Constitutional Disagreement in Europe and the search for Pluralism," Eric Stein Working Paper No. 1/2010, available at http://www.ericsteinpapers.eu/papers/2010/1.html
Abstract
This paper has two purposes. One is to suggest that constitutional pluralism is an empty idea. Where there are multiple sources of apparently constitutional law one always takes precedence and the other is then no longer constitutional. Dialogue may help the legal sources reconcile, but it does not change the normative hierarchy between them. The second purpose is to make a concrete proposal for embedding pluralist thinking within EU law. The proposal is in the spirit of Maduro’s suggestion that national courts should take account of EU interests in interpreting national law, and also in the spirit of Kumm’s suggestion that EU law should be self-policing. However, unlike Maduro it focuses on the need for a more pluralist approach within EU law, rather than national law, and unlike Kumm it focuses on the need to prevent EU law becoming a threat to national constitutions, rather than mechanisms for defusing conflict if things get that far. The two purposes are linked by a common perception: that the investment in constitutional pluralism by scholars has not brought satisfactory returns, yet pluralism is too attractive an idea to be abandoned in haste.
It is a pre-publication draft of a chapter to be published in M Avbelj and J Komárek (eds), Constitutional Pluralism in Europe and Beyond, forthcoming in Hart Publishing.
Keywords
EU law - pluralism - constitutionalism - constitutional pluralism - constitutional courts - supremacy - proportionality
You can download the paper here [pdf].