‘Playing the Judicial Card’: Litigation Strategies during the Process of Ratification of the Lisbon Treaty

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Series Details Vol.20, No.5, September 2014, p630–648
Publication Date September 2014
ISSN 1351-5993 (Print) / 1468-0386 (Online)
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Abstract
During the process of ratification of the Lisbon Treaty, a number of constitutional jurisdictions were activated by political actors. In playing ‘the judicial card’, opponents of ratification decided to seek political goals through judicial means, and thus they were obliged to develop litigation strategies. This article explores such strategies and the responses that courts gave them. It shows that constitutional proceedings with regards to the Lisbon Treaty became a political battleground governed by legal logics, in which the interpretation of European clauses, the democratic deficit of the Union and the tensions underlying the European judicial dialogue were privileged objects of discussion between claimants and courts in which law and politics intertwined.

Source Link http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eulj.12073
Related Links
ESO: Background information: Ratification of the Lisbon Treaty: problems not only in Ireland http://www.europeansources.info/record/ratification-of-the-lisbon-treaty-problems-not-only-in-ireland/

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