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European Studies

Subject Guide for European Studies

The European Union

EU in Brief
Includes brief history, flag, anthem, descriptions of the major organizations and processes of EU and links to further readings. 

EU by Topics

The EU is active in a wide range of topics, from human rights to transport and trade. Click on a topic title for a summary of what the EU does in that area, and for useful links to relevant bodies, laws and documents.

Legislation
The “Summaries of EU legislation” website presents the main aspects of European Union (EU) legislation in a concise, easy-to-read and unbiased manner. It forms part of the Europa portal, which is published by the EU institutions.

Institutions

A list of all EU institutions and bodies such as the European parliament, the European Council, or the European Central Bank.

Documents and Publications

An overview of EU publications, reports, statistics and EU libraries.

European Foreign Policy Resource Guide

This resource guide focuses of the foreign policy of the EU. Each theme and area of EU external relations is divided into several specific topics for which academic literature, official resources, and other resources are available in the form of references or links to dedicated websites – leading to a unique set of thousands of sources.

Joint Research Centre's Publications

The JRC Publications Repository gives access to research results of the Joint Research Centre: Science-for-Policy reports, articles, technical reports and other scientific outputs.
The content grows daily as new publications are added to the repository.
The JRC Publications Repository is organised around the JRC Science areas

EU Member Nations

Austria

Belgium

Bulgaria

Croatia

Cyprus

Czechia

Denmark

Estonia

Finland

France

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Ireland

Italy

Latvia

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Malta

Netherlands

Poland

Portugal
Romania

Slovakia
Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

Candidate Countries (These countries are in the process of 'transposing' (or integrating) EU legislation into national law)
Albania

Montenegro

North Macedonia

Serbia

Turkey

Potential Candidates (Potential candidate countries do not yet fulfil the requirements for EU membership:)

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Kosovo

 

 

Principle Governing Institutions of the EU

A unique institutional set-up

In the EU's unique institutional set-up:

  • the EU's broad priorities are set by the European Council, which brings together national and EU-level leaders
  • directly elected MEPs represent European citizens in the European Parliament
  • the interests of the EU as a whole are promoted by the European Commission, whose members are appointed by national governments
  • governments defend their own country's national interests in the Council of the European Union.

Setting the agenda

The European Council sets the EU's overall political direction – but has no powers to pass laws. Led by its President - currently Charles Michel - and comprising national heads of state or government and the President of the Commission, it meets for a few days at a time at least twice every 6 months.

Law-making

There are 3 main institutions involved in EU legislation:

European Parliament

The European Parliament is a representative body elected directly by the people of the European Union (EU) member countries. Representatives serve five year terms and sit by political rather than national affiliation. The principal roles of the Parliament are: to examine and adopt European legislation (a power shared equally with the Council of Europe); to approve the EU budget; to exercize democratic control over the other EU institutions, with the power to set up committees of inquiry; and to assent to important international agreements such as the accession ofnew EU Member States and trade or association magreements between the EU and other countries.

Council of the European Union

Also informally known as the EU Council, it represents the governments of the individual member countries. The Presidency of the Council is shared by the member states on a rotating basis.

Not to be confused with:

  • European Council – another EU institution, where EU leaders meet around 4 times a year to discuss the EU’s political priorities
  • Council of Europe – not an EU body at all.

European Commission

The European Commission drafts proposals for new European laws and manages their implementation when approved by the Parliament and Council. The Commission also supervises expenditures and community adherence to treaties and European laws. The 25 members are nominated by their member governments and approved by the Parliament. They serve five year terms and are assisted by a large body of civil servants.

Together, these three institutions produce through the "Ordinary Legislative Procedure" (ex "co-decision") the policies and laws that apply throughout the EU. In principle, the Commission proposes new laws, and the Parliament and Council adopt them. The Commission and the member countries then implement them, and the Commission ensures that the laws are properly applied and implemented.

Other EU institutions and bodies

Two other institutions play vital roles:

Court of Justice of the EU

The Court of Justice ensures compliance and uniform interpretation of the laws passed by the Parliament and Council. The 25 Judges and 8 Advocates-General are appointed by common accord of the governments of the Member States and hold office for a renewable term of six years.

Court of Auditors

The Court of Auditors checks that all the Union's revenue has been received and all its expenditure incurred in a lawful and regular manner and that the EU budget has been managed soundly. Established in 1977, the Court has one member from each EU country, appointed by the Council for a renewable term of six years. Even after enlargement there will still be one member per EU country but, for the sake of efficiency, the Court can set up "chambers" (with only a few members each) to adopt certain types of report or opinion.

The powers and responsibilities of all of these institutions are laid down in the Treaties, which are the foundation of everything the EU does. They also lay down the rules and procedures that the EU institutions must follow. The Treaties are agreed by the presidents and/or prime ministers of all the EU countries, and ratified by their parliaments.

The EU has a number of other institutions and interinstitutional bodies that play specialised roles:

 

Political Parties and Elections

Law

Research and Working Papers

 

ERPwas a common access point in the field of European integration research. 1925 papers are archived there.

The Working Paper series is a tangible representation of the scholarship resulting from the Emile Noël Fellowships.  The papers will appear in a series of publications of The Jean Monnet Center, including this web site, which will serve as the online platform for the series. Launched in 1990 at the specific request of the academic world, the Jean Monnet Project aims to promote teaching in European integration, in particular in Law, Economics, Political Science and History – the disciplines where European Union developments are becoming an increasingly important part of the subject studied and where student demand is at its greatest.

Founded in Brussels in 1983, CEPS is a leading think tank and forum for debate on EU affairs, ranking among the top ten non-US think tanks.

 

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