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OverviewEnhanced Cooperation Revisited offers a detailed and thought-provoking examination of one of the EU’s most discussed yet rarely applied tools for differentiated integration. Situated between supranational ambition and national sovereignty, enhanced cooperation allows groups of Member States to adopt EU law among them when unanimity proves to be out of reach —without changing the Treaties or creating opt-outs. The book explores enhanced cooperation as a legal and political mechanism that enables integration through flexibility. Departing from a thorough, yet innovative legal analysis and incorporating interdisciplinary insights, the study presents a fresh typology of enhanced cooperation uses, proposes innovative interpretations of its legal framework, and explores options like fast-track procedures and conditional participation, as well as a field-map of legal areas suitable for enhanced cooperation. A novel proposal for “incentivised cooperation” suggests a targeted Treaty amendment to make the mechanism more promising as a facilitating tool in the most contested policy areas. Enhanced Cooperation Revisited casts new light on a little-used but powerful tool in the EU’s integration arsenal—one that may yet help the European Union in reconciling unity and diversity in the years ahead. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Johannes Graf von LucknerPublisher: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden Imprint: Springer VS ISBN: 9783658510626ISBN 10: 3658510625 Pages: 247 Publication Date: 11 June 2026 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of Contents1. Enhanced Cooperation.- 2. The Real Scope of Application of Enhanced Cooperation – Between Legal Constraints and Incentive Structures.- 3. The Principle of Last Resort – Do Procedural Legal Constraints Stand in the Way of a More Thorough Use of Enhanced Cooperation?.- 4. Rethinking the Procedural Principle of Openness Towards Innovative use of Enhanced Cooperation – Conditionality.- 5. Making Differentiated Integration Fit for the Future – “Incentivised Cooperation” as a Future Variant in the Treaties.- 6. Conclusions.ReviewsAuthor InformationAfter his research on differentiated EU integration at the University of Erfurt, the author now serves in the Legal Service of the Council of the European Union. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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