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The EUs heads of government reached agreement on the new Treaty at the European Council on 17-18 June. The provisional text was put before the House [as Cm 6289] on 19 July. The final texts in all the EUs 21 official languages are being prepared for the signature of the Treaty in Rome on 29 October. To assist this debate, and wider discussion in the country, I published earlier today a White Paper which sets out the main elements of the new Treaty, and analyses how the Government delivered on the negotiating objectives which we outlined in our White Paper of September last year.
An analysis of the repeated existential crises affecting the resilience of the European Union in the twenty-first century.
This publication contains the text of the Treaty, including the protocols and annexes, and final act with declarations, as signed in Rome on 29 October 2004. The Treaty will take effect only on the date of its entry into force (1 November 2006) provided that all the instruments of ratification have been deposited by the contracting parties.
This Command Paper contains the final text of the EU Constitutional Treaty, as agreed in Rome in October 2004. The Treaty was drawn up as a result of the discussions of the Convention on the Future of Europe, established as a forum for consideration of wide-ranging reforms, particularly taking into account the consequences of EU enlargement, and the need to improve the clarity, transparency, accountability and efficiency of its decision-making processes.
Based on a lecture delivered by the author at the Leuven Centre for a Common Law of Europe, this book demonstrates the need to mind the gap between the evolving EU executive and the constitution. Mind the Gap focuses on the more low level politics of the EU by analyzing how the EU has evolved in institutional practice over the past decade. The manner in which powers and tasks have been delegated to a whole series of non-majoritarian agencies are a striking illustration of the development in practice of institutional structures without a legal basis in the constituent treaties or in the constitution. As the EU is doing away with its divisive pillars, the time has come to lift the veil on the agencies and approach them in a horizontal fashion and embrace them fully within the evolving constitutional framework.