JJUA55129U EU International Relations Law: The External Dimension of European Integration - NOTE: THE COURSE IS CANCELLED IN THE AUTUMN SEMESTER 2018
Over the past six decades of European Integration, the role of
the European Union has become increasingly important, to the point
where the EU has become an international actor which is separate
and distinctive from its Member States. First developed the Common
Commercial Policy, through which the Union now possesses a wide
competence to act before the World
Trade Organization, a competence which is to the exclusion of the
EU Member States. As political integration followed and economic
integration widened, the Union became a distinct international
actor in many more fields: With the Lisbon Treaty, foreign direct
investment has become an exclusive competence of the Union; EU
military actions to combat piracy in the gulf of Aden are run
through Operation Atalanta, a mission part of the EU’s Common
Security and
Defence Policy; international aviation is increasingly organized
through EU agreements alone; extradition with the US is organized
on the basis of a mixed EU-Member State agreement negotiated by the
Commission, the list is long. Long gone are the days where Member
States of the European Union conducted their individual foreign
policies independently of each other.
The aim of this course is to provide students interested in EU
law, international law and international politics a deeper insight
into the growing body of ‘EU External Relations Law’. In doing so
the course will seek to provide the student with a strong sense of
why European integration has developed as it has over the past six
decades. The goal is to understand and
debate the legal and political interests that have shaped the
present state of the Union in the world: the historical impact of
the Court of Justice, the influence of pro-integration members, the
influence of the Commission, Council and Parliament. The goal is
thus to not simply know internal rules governing EU external
relations as well as EU law as against international law,
but also to look beyond law – to understand the economic and
political interests which these rules reflect, and to comprehend
their impact on socio-economic and political processes these rules
intend to organize. One key question we will investigate throughout
the semester is then this: Is the internal fragmentation of the EU
and its Member States damaging Europe’s ability to reflect its
interests on the international scene in an effective and coherent
fashion?
This course will guide the student through the internal and external aspects of EU external relations law. Internally, the course examines the legal organization of the European Union as an international actor: its development towards having a distinct legal personality; its exclusive policy competences and those its shares with the Member States, the legal nature of mixed international agreements – treaties concluded by both the EU and its Member States and the challenges they entail. The role of the European Court of Justice, and the institutional framework of EU external relations. Prominent in this course will be the Lisbon Treaty changes, notably the European Union External Action Service, the new diplomatic service of the Union. Externally, the course examines the participation of the EU in international organizations, and the relationship between international law and EU law. The latter includes the relationship between WTO and EU law, as well as recent debates on human rights protection at EU and UN level in the context of combating terrorism.
In keeping with the law-in-context approach of this course, a number of substantive policy areas will be discussed: international trade (goods, services and investment); development; aviation and energy policy; common foreign and security policy (defence and peacekeeping); and justice and home affairs.
During the course, students will be able to become compentent in
acquiring new knowledge on the EU’s international relations from a
legal persepctive. With such new skillsets, that will be gained,
students competencies will allow them to identify the complex legal
problems concerning the rules that govern the relationship between
the Member States and the EU and between the EU institutions. It
will allow the students to formulate and argue in a clear and
concise fashion a legal argument on the constitutional and
institutional rules that will be outlined, discussed and debated
during the classes. Upon completion of the course, it will allow
the students to demonstrate analytical capacity to separate legal
reasoning from political arguments, and possess the ability to
argue how they interrelate in the context of EU external
relations law.
Furthermore, they will be able to argue why law has such an
important role in the EU as an international actor, more so
than in domestic legal systems. All of this new knowledge, skills,
and competences will be predicated on the basis of having the
ability to contextualise the EU and international rules against the
broader context of European integration
and international politics.
Max. 750 pages consisting of selected articles, book chapters and relevant case-law.
objectives of this course are a critical attitude to objectivity in law and contextualisation of law in political context. To attain that goal, in this course we will aim to go beyond passive lectures, and active participation is necessary. The nature of the material is such that it lends itself to debate and disagreement, and success of the classes are predicated on students having read andprepared the required materials before coming to class. Interaction and discussion is essential.
To support the preparation, in most of the sessions, questions have been prepared in relation to the reading materials. These questions will be posed in class, and through debates on them we will tease out legal issues, within the political context. All students are expected to give one presentation in-class, which consists of briefly presenting to class the required reading for that day. In the presentations, the main arguments should be outlined, as well as the problems. The depth of the syllabus is intended for those truly interested in the field. That said, for the final examination, students are only expected to know the required reading materials in line with the teaching objectives set out in the course description. The recommended readings are for those students who wish to know more about a certain topic, aimed at jumpstarting preparation for the synopses, where a deeper knowledge on the topic is expected.
- Category
- Hours
- Preparation
- 356,5
- Seminar
- 56
- Total
- 412,5
Enrolling as a Single Master Level/ Credit Student:
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For further
information
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Oral examination, 20 minutesOral exam based on synopsis, 20 minutes
- Exam registration requirements
In order to attend the oral examination, it is a prerequisite to hand in the synopsis before the specified deadline.
The deadline is agreed upon with the course lecturer.- Marking scale
- 7-point grading scale
- Censorship form
- External censorship
- Exam period
Week 51, 2018 - Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
- Re-exam
Week 5, 2019 - Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- JJUA55129U
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree MasterFull Degree Master choice
- Duration
- 1 semester
- Placement
- Autumn
- Schedule
- Please see the timetable for teaching time
- Continuing and further education
- Price
DKK 15.000
- Study board
- Law
Contracting department
- Law
Contracting faculty
- Faculty of Law
Course Coordinators
- Helle Krunke (Helle.Krunke@jur.ku.dk)