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Complete summary: slides and book Institutions and policy of the European Union 2025/26 - KU Leuven

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This complete summary covers every chapter that is supposed to be known for the exam: the book, the slides and the main message of the guest lectures. I never had less than a 15/20 with my summaries. The book chapters that are summarised are: 1) What is the European Union 5) The European Commission 6) The councils 7) The European Parliament 8) The court of justice of the European Union 9) The European Central Bank and other EU bodies and Agencies 10) Representing Public opinion in the EU 11) Public policy and the budget of the EU 12) The single market, monetary union and regional development policy 13) Agricultural policy 14) Environmental policy 16) Security and global power 17) the EU and the world Ideal for exam preparation and grasping the core concepts of EU.

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INSTITUTIONS AND POLICY OF THE
EUROPEAN UNION
INTRODUCTION

No agreement on just how we should define and understand the EU

Origins and motives behind European integration

 Frustration about war and conflict
 First thoughts about a peaceful and voluntary union after WW1
 Concept matured after WW2

European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)

 April 1951
 Treaty of Paris
 Set up to prove the advantages of regional integration
 France, West- Germany, Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg

European Economic Community (EEC)

 Expansion of members
 Treaty of Rome
 More ambitious goal of integration

European Union (EU)

 27 member states
 450 million residents
 Common currency
 Integration vs. Unification
 When one speaks of Europe this means the EU

Founding treaties:

 Single European Act (1987): elimination of the barriers
 Maastricht treaty (1993): single currency, common citizenship and common foreign and
security policy and EEC became EU
 Treaties of Amsterdam and Nice (1998 and 2003): fine tuning powers of the institutions and
prepare EU for new member states from Eastern Europe
 Trying to replace the accumulated treaties with a European constitution  failed
(2002/2004): French & Dutch didn’t ratify
 Treaty of Lisbon: reform of several EU institutions and more coherent Union policies

,Main institutions:

 The European commission: in BXL, executive & administrative branch of the EU
o Developing wew EU laws, policies & overseeing implementation
 The council of the EU (= council of the ministers): in BXL
o Decision- making body
o together with European parliament voting commission’s proposals into laws
 The European council: consists of leaders from every member state (meet- up 4x a year)
o Broad decisions on policy
 The European Parliament: Strasbourg, Luxembourg and Brussels. Directly elected for 5 years
o Discussion of Commission proposals
 The court of justice of the EU: In Luxembourg
o interprets EU law + helps build a common body of law




Different views about the EU and its policies across the EU

 In the different MS the EU is perceived as a more positive/ negative of neutral thing
 They also have different visions on the expansion of it

Different views on EU policy-making and different willingness to participate in EU policy making

 How valuable is your vote?
 Turnout is different in every country

,WHAT IS THE EU?


WHAT DO WE TALK ABOUT, WHEN WE TALK ABOUT THE EU?

 Talking about ‘the EU’ requires nuance:
o Consider what and who is (not) meant by the EU
o Consider that the EU means different things to different people
 Europe occasionally used where EU would be more accurate  stylistic reasons
o Two terms increasingly the same meaning
 EU ≠ Europe
 EU ≈ Memberstates
 The EU ≈ various institutions…
 When you think about EU you think of confederation, federation, state, international
organization, intergovernmentalism, (Neo)Functionalism, (Multi-level) Governance,
Supranationalism,…




 Will the EU ever be one nation?
 Europe of citizens
o European people coming together and forming new european entitiy, new european
system
 Europe of offices
o Europe as vague political system
o System of multilevel governance: making the borders between nations between
levels

IS THE EU A STATE OR AN INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION?: THE EU AS A STATE-BASED
‘CONFEDERAL’ SYSTEM VS. A ‘FEDERAL’ POLITY IN ITS OWN RIGHT


STATE

= a legal and physical entity that…

, 1) operates within a fixed and populated territory
o + EU = sum of its MS’ territory, borders recognized;
o + EU has various symbols of statehood for its population;
o - EU keeps expanding/territory changes;
 EU can lose MS
o - EU doesn’t fully operate its territory, but EU MS do.
 In some areas exclusive competences, but sometimes not, police national,
national education system
2) has authority over that territory
o EU system of law to which MS are subject;
o EU competences vary, no all-encompassing authority.
3) is legally and politically independent
o (rather) independent of other international actors;
o Internally (rather) dependent of its Member States
 Almost can’t do anything without approval and later implementation by MS
4) is recognized by its people and by other states.
o General recognition by other states (e.g., trade agreements);
o EU citizenship;
 Not everybody feels european, not the same as they feel connected with
nationstate
o Variation in extent of recognition by other states;
o Various extent of ‘feeling European’ among EU citizens.


INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION

 International organisations
o = bodies that promote voluntary cooperation and coordination between or among
their members but have neither autonomous powers nor the authority to impose
their rulings on their members (Olsen & Hansen, 2026)
o Voluntary cooperation and coordination between or among their members
 Voluntary decision to join EU and delegate authority
o Neither autonomous powers nor the authority to impose their rulings on their
members
 EU institutions not fully autonomous (depends on delegation)
 EU institutions hold different levels of authority, some of authority is
extensive
 Eg trade, MS cannot negotiate individual trade agreements, cannot
have independently own monetary policy
 MS do not maintain complete authority
 Primacy of EU law, role of EU courts
 European law primacy over national law, EU courts over national law
 Goes way beyond what IOs such as UN can do
 Intergovernmental organisations (IGOs)
o = “organizations with at least three state parties, a permanent headquarters or
secretariat, as well as regular meetings and budgets” (Eilstrup-Sangiovanni 2020)

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Summarized whole book?
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Which chapters are summarized?
Alle te kennen hoofdstukken voor het examen van european politics: 1,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,16,17
Uploaded on
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Number of pages
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Written in
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