Historical Conditionalities and Political Implications of European Integration for South-Eastern Europe: A Conceptual Map

Similar documents
THE CONCEPT OF EUROPEANIZATION. SELECTED THEORETICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES (PART 1)

EDITORIAL GUIDANCE NOTES BRITAIN IN EUROPE AND EUROPE IN BRITAIN: THE EUROPEANISATION OF BRITISH POLITICS? INTRODUCTION

Regional policy in Croatia in search for domestic policy and institutional change

Working Title: When Progressive Law Hits Home: The Race and Employment Equality Directives in Austria, Germany and Spain

The Europenity Index. Statistical Survey on Five Target Groups

A gradual Europeanization of labour migration?

THE EUROPEANIZATION OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE

Contents. Acknowledgements

Theorising top-down Europeanisation

POLI 359 Public Policy Making

CHALLENGES OF THE RECENT FINANCIAL CRISIS UPON THE EUROPEAN UNION ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE

The dual nature of Europeanization: divergent national mechanisms to common monetary and securities markets policy

CAPITALISM AND DEMOCRACY IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE

Europeanization of UK defence policy: A European Defence Capability supported by Atlanticists

Key Words: public, policy, citizens, society, institutional, decisions, governmental.

Europeanization of the Bulgarian Regional Policy

Political Empowerment of European Citizens. A Comparative Public Opinion and Approach 1

Europeanization in the making. Perceptions on the Economic Effects of European Integration in Romania

The Implementation of the Dublin regulations in Greece, Italy and Spain

Europeanisation, internationalisation and globalisation in higher education Anneke Lub, CHEPS

THE PROCESS OF EUROPEANIZATION OF LAW IN THE CONTEXT OF CZECH LAW

Beyond Policy Change: Convergence of Corporatist Patterns in the European Union?

Europeanization of Economic Policy in the New Member States. Petia Kostadinova Center for European Studies University of Florida

GOOD GOVERNANCE: NORMATIVE VS. DESCRIPTIVE DIMENSION

Europeanization, European Integration, and Globalization

The Europeanization of gender equality

By Joanna Smigiel. Submitted to Central European University Department of Public Policy

International Conference Identity and Intercultural Communication

Europeanization: A Governance Approach

Theorising Europeanisation in European Literature: Conceptualisation and Operationalisation

Introduction: Political Dynamics in Post-Communist Romania

Globalization and Europeanization. A Projection on a European Model of Public Administration

T05P07 / International Administrative Governance: Studying the Policy Impact of International Public Administrations

REGIONAL POLICY MAKING AND SME

THE NEW PENAL CODE. EUROPEAN UNION REQUIREMENT OR NECESSITY FOR ROMANIA?

A MONOGRAPHIC APPROACH TO THE LEGAL PROTECTION OF CONSUMERS

Key Concepts & Research in Political Science and Sociology

Political Science (PSCI)

1. Introduction 2. Theoretical Framework & Key Concepts

Configurations of politicoadministrative. organisation of public administration reforms. (Inductive approach )

Parliamentary vs. Presidential Systems

Post-accession compliance between administrative co-ordination and political bargaining*

Theories of European integration. Dr. Rickard Mikaelsson

THE REFORM OF THE UNITED NATIONS SECURITY COUNCIL AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT

Local reforms by political conditionality: trials and erros in Central and Eastern Europe

Postmodern Openings 2015, Volume 6, Issue 2, December, pp

The Politics of Egalitarian Capitalism; Rethinking the Trade-off between Equality and Efficiency

FEDERALISM AND SUBNATIONAL POLITICAL COMMUNITY

APPLICATION FORM FOR PROSPECTIVE WORKSHOP DIRECTORS

Poznan July The vulnerability of the European Elite System under a prolonged crisis

Leading glocal security challenges

Judicial Cooperation in Criminal Matters in the Light of the Lisbon Treaty

The European Union in Search of a Democratic and Constitutional Theory

The institutional transfer from the European Union member states to the former Soviet Union countries

Do great expectations in Brussels fail due to political disagreement in Stockholm?

Time and Differentiated Integration*

HANDBOOK ON COHESION POLICY IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

Anti-immigration populism: Can local intercultural policies close the space? Discussion paper

Analytical Challenges for Neoinstitutional Theories of Institutional Change in Comparative Political Science*

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLI)

The Constitutional Principle of Government by People: Stability and Dynamism

THE NOWADAYS CRISIS IMPACT ON THE ECONOMIC PERFORMANCES OF EU COUNTRIES

Basic Approaches to Legal Security Understanding and Its Provision at an International Level

A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN ROMANIA AND MOLDOVA FROM AN INSTITUTIONALIST PERSPECTIVE

Civil society in the EU: a strong player or a fig-leaf for the democratic deficit?

Loredana RADU Liliana LUPESCU Flavia ALUPEI-DURACH Mirela PÎRVAN Abstract: Key words JEL classification: 1. INTRODUCTION

CONCEPTUALISING EUROPEANISATION. Jim Buller. University of York, Andrew Gamble, University of Sheffield,

FOREIGN TRADE AND FDI AS MAIN FACTORS OF GROWTH IN THE EU 1

The Impact of European Democracy Promotion on Party Financing in the East European Neighborhood

Title: Socialization of CEE Governments in the EU Environment - Who Shapes the Norms?

Policy-Making in the European Union

Revue Française des Affaires Sociales. The Euro crisis - what can Social Europe learn from this?

CROSS-NATIONAL POLICY CONVERGENCE IN THE ENVIRONMENTAL FIELD: THE EU AND ITS MEDITERRANEAN PARTNERSHIP COUNTRIES

WHO WILL WIN IN THE NAME OF GLOBAL DEMOCRACY?

Official Journal of the European Union. (Acts whose publication is obligatory) DECISION No 803/2004/EC OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL

TEACHING INTEGRITY AND THE CENTER FOR EXCELLENCE IN INTEGRITY AT NUSP

Competition and Cooperation in Environmental Policy: Individual and Interaction Effects 1

The Interdependence between the Domestic Legal Order and the International Legal Order

2 Theoretical background and literature review

Political Institutions and Policy-Making in the European Union. Fall 2007 Political Science 603

THE SINGLE MARKET OF THE EUROPEAN UNION, A PRE-CONDITION OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COHESION

2. Good governance the concept

UNDERSTANDING AND WORKING WITH POWER. Effective Advising in Statebuilding and Peacebuilding Contexts How 2015, Geneva- Interpeace

Per H. Jensen. FLOWS project

Water Governance from the basin to the global. Claudia Pahl-Wostl and Joyeeta Gupta

ASA ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY SECTION NEWSLETTER ACCOUNTS. Volume 9 Issue 2 Summer 2010

Comparative Legislative Politics

EU Law as a Driver Of Domestic Gender Policies

About the programme MA Comparative Public Governance

Outline of the project: Governing values, governing through values, governed by values? The European Union as a risk polity (ValEUR)

The Discursive Institutionalism of Continuity and Change: The Case of Patient Safety in Wales ( ).

Social Cooperatives, Service Quality, and the Development of Quasi Markets in Northern Italy: A Resource Dependency Framework

Introduction: Cross-national policy convergence: concepts, approaches and explanatory factors

BUILDING RESILIENT REGIONS FOR STRONGER ECONOMIES OECD

THE MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE DOCUMENT FOR THE ADRIATIC/IONIAN MACRO-REGION: ADRIGOV AND EUSAIR FOR THE REVIVAL OF TERRITORIAL COOPERATION

Note: Principal version Equivalence list Modification Complete version from 1 October 2014 Master s Programme Sociology: Social and Political Theory

Worlds of compliance: Why leading approaches to European Union implementation are only sometimes-true theories

USING SOCIAL JUSTICE, PUBLIC HEALTH, AND HUMAN RIGHTS TO PREVENT VIOLENCE IN SOUTH AFRICA. Garth Stevens

The Application of Theoretical Models to Politico-Administrative Relations in Transition States

B.A. Study in English International Relations Global and Regional Perspective

Transcription:

Joint International Conference of Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Researchers, Craiova, 12-13 September 2014 Historical Conditionalities and Political Implications of European Integration for South-Eastern Europe: A Conceptual Map Cătălina Maria Georgescu * ABSTRACT The paper discusses the key concepts, theories and models analysing the process and consequences of European integration for the organization and functioning of public organizations in South-Eastern European states studied on three pillars: the case of European Union Member States, the case of Candidate Countries and the case of potentially Candidate Countries. The research is an innovation as regards the scientific approaches on the transformation of the public organizations, through the re-orientation of the analytical perspective of institutional change, using the support of historical institutionalism and building on the working hypothesis which grants the value of independent variable to historical events, state structure, the European integration process, but also to local identities to account for the variations in the evolution of institutional structures. Following a path dependency-based approach, the study thus imposes the correlation of the interpretation of the impact of historical facts and South-Eastern Europe specificities (culture, mentality, identity, legislation), but also a theoretical specialization which assumes the use of key-concepts in the field of political sciences and public organizations. By articulating the role of Europeanization process, the impact of historical events in the respective geographical area, the developments of each state and the historical evolution of European establishment, the research aims at developing a conceptual map in the analysis of the institutional transformations of public organizations within the context of European integration. KEYWORDS Europeanization, historical institutionalism, public administration, path dependence, contingency, South-Eastern Europe. * Dr., University of Craiova, Craiova, Romania. 1

Introduction: building concepts and delimitating cases Starting from the assumption that Europe matters (Radaelli, 2000, Auel, 2006), European integration processes and consequences are subjects of seminal theoretical and empirical researches undergone on multiple directions of study: institutions creation and institutional change, strengthening administrative capacity, agenda-setting, political economy, Europeanization, public policy-making, policy implementation, multi-level governance, new public management, principal-agent relations, policy networks, new institutionalism analyses, sovereignty transfer. Without conceiving Europeanization as a replacement mechanism of the traditional sovereign state with its classical elements of democratic participation and territoriality, Borneman and Fowler (1997) analyse the practical fields of competing national interests organizing territoriality and peoplehood. Researches have been carried out in comparative perspective to identify South-Eastern Europe new Member States and/or Old Member States differences in integration patterns, as well as the convergence towards a European model (Adshead, 2005: 160). The paper discusses the key concepts, theories and models analysing the process and consequences of European integration for the organization and functioning of public organizations in South-Eastern European states studied on three pillars: the case of European Union Member States, the case of Candidate Countries and the case of potentially Candidate Countries. Using the support of historical institutionalism, the research is an innovation as regards the scientific approaches on the transformation of the public organizations, through the re-orientation of the analytical perspective of institutional change. The paper builds on the working hypothesis which grants the value of independent variable to historical events, state structure, the European integration process, but also to local identities to account for the variations in the evolution of institutional structures. Among the key concepts of European integration studies, Europeanization analyses the processes of adjustment, adaptation or download of European practices through a top-down perspective to which was added the bottom-up approach which assumes the upload of national policy interests, national cultures and voice (Goetz and Meyer-Sahling, 2008, Adshead, 2005: 159-160). Path dependent approaches to European integration: building on existing institutions Following a path dependency-based approach, the study thus imposes the correlation of the interpretation of the impact of historical facts and South-Eastern Europe specificities (culture, mentality, identity, legislation), but also a theoretical specialization which assumes the use of key-concepts in the field of political sciences and public organizations. By articulating the role of Europeanization process, the impact of historical events in the respective geographical area, the developments of each state and the historical evolution of European establishment, 2

the research aims at developing a conceptual map in the analysis of the institutional transformations of public organizations within the context of European integration. It has been demonstrated that historical conditions, national factors and institutional characteristics account for the evolution of market liberalization processes (Belloc, Nicita and Parcu, 2013) determining scientists to consider that the current regulatory framework is path dependent (Adshead, 2005, Benz, 2004, Berglund, Gange and van Waarden, 2006, Böhm and Landwehr, 2014, Börzel and Risse, 2000, Bulmer, 1998, Camyar, 2010). EU conditionality mechanisms partly explain the different institutional patterns adopted by Member States, however other factors must be taken into account especially concerning multicultural identities and relations, cultural pluralism and national sovereignty prerequisites (Olimid, 2011: 169-179). Historical institutionalism studies consider that Europeanization is path-dependent, building on causal relevance of preceding stages in a temporal sequence (Belloc, Nicita and Parcu, 2013: 136). The dynamics of integration was also linked to institutional complementarities (Belloc et all., 2013), organizational routine and policy learning (Berglund, Gange and van Waarden, 2006). EU regulation and policy-learning are corroborated (selected for the cooperation process between national governments and supranational EU institutions) with the harmonization of decision-making processes and institutions (Böhm and Landwehr, 2014). A different opinion is shared by those who analyse resistance to institutional change (Crespy, 2011). Studies on Europeanization phenomenon: building explanations State of the art reviews divides researches on Europeanization according to three levels: empirical, conceptual and explanatory-theoretical (Goetz and Meyer- Sahling, 2008). Adaptation of national institutions within the context of European integration has been analysed through new institutionalism approaches in the direction of national institutional and decision-making structures and system change (Adshead, 2005: 159 178, Börzel and Risse, 2000, Goetz and Meyer- Sahling 2008), institutional learning (Aligica, 2003: 87 99, Böhm, and Landwehr, 2014: 17-35), socialization processes (Adshead, 2005: 159 178), institutional change and formal (Puetter, 2008: 479-491, Hungdah, 2004) and also informal adaptation (Auel, 2006: 249-268), institutional vetoes and goodness-of-fit (Bailey, 2002: 791-811, Haverland, 2000: 83-103, Desmet, van Spanje and de Vreese, 2012: 1071-1088), resistance to change and path-dependence (Camyar, 2010, Crespy, 2011, Dimitrakopoulos, 2001a: 405-422, Dimitrakopoulos, 2001b: 442-458). Researches on institutional change triggered by EU membership were envisaged on four directions, at the level of formal institutional structures at the tiers of government, processes and procedures within the civil service, codes and guidelines as regards the Cabinet, ministers and civil service, and the cultural dimension (Bulmer and Burch, 1998: 601-628, Adshead, 2005: 159 178). Europeanization as a middle-range theory is emphasized in studies aimed at identifying the influence of EU for the domestic policy-making and policy- 3

enforcement processes (Adshead, 2005: 159). The widest accepted working definition of Europeanization asserts this phenomenon as processes of (a) construction, (b) diffusion and (c) institutionalization of formal and informal rules, procedures, policy paradigms, styles, ways of doing things and shared beliefs and norms which are first defined and consolidated in the EU policy process and then incorporated in the logic of domestic discourse, identities, political structures and public policies (Radaelli, 2000, also Radaelli in Boussaguet et all., 2009: 108), thus molding the triad politics-polity-policy in the definition. A more restrictive approach defines Europeanization as a process reorienting the direction and shape of politics to the degree the EC political and economic dynamics become part of the organizational logic of national politics and policy-making (Ladrech, 1994: 69). Researches delimitated Europeanization effects according to intra- and interstate dimensions, the first category surprising governance changes within the multilayered European framework, whereas the latter bringing forwards transversal effects and opportunities discovered through the widening of European integration (Adshead, 2005: 159 178). Moreover, according to the effects of integration, studies are divided along the dichotomies of: de-parliamentarisation vs. reparliamentarisation, bureaucratization vs. politicisation, centralization vs. diffusion (Goetz and Meyer-Sahling, 2008). Europeanization and patterns of integration: towards a re-configuration of the conceptual map Scholars were also eager in delimitating the Europeanization concept by narrowing the conceptual limits of the term; thus, Europeanization was delimitated from convergence, harmonization, EU policy-making and political integration thus aiming at conceptualizing the domains in which it produces effects, the extent and direction of the process (Radaelli, 2000). By identifying the domains in which Europeanization matters, Radaelli (2000) fills in a conceptual representation of the integration process in which domestic political structures (the author points towards institutions especially towards national legislatives and executives as traditional receivers of the integration effects, public administration, intergovernmental relations, the state s legal structure and structures of representation ), but also cognitive and normative structures, national discourse, national collective identities meet (European) public policy-making. The proportions of domestic change and its directions were conceptualized under the form of inertia, absorption, transformation and retrenchment (Radaelli, 2000, Börzel and Risse, 2000). Along this line, Radaelli (2000) reviews the literature and de-constructs the conceptual meanings of these notions, by defining absorption as adaptation or accommodation, while retrenchment designates the resistance to change. The development of a conceptual matrix also considers the mechanisms of change (Radaelli, 2000) visualising the Europeanization process under the form of goodness of fit (Bailey, 2002), drawing on European 4

models, the creation of domestic opportunity structures and directives framing integration (Knill and Lehmkuhl, 1999), mechanisms of coercion, mimetism and normative pressures (Radaelli, 2000), and also explanations through cognitive convergence (Radaelli, 2000). The de-parliamentarisation/re-parliamentarisation dichotomy appeared in European studies on the costs and benefits associated to integration. National legislatives were seen as being deprived of some traditional competences within the EU multi-level framework (Duina, Oliver, 2005: 173-195), having to adapt strategically as veto-players (Benz, 2004: 875-900) or to develop new patters of interactions in order to achieve national interests (Auel and Benz, 2005: 372-393, Auel, 2006: 249-268). Control of the agenda, political power-opposition competition, coalition gaming, the exercise of parliamentary veto-power or negotiation perspectives, and also the exercise of governmental legislative options (Gîrleșteanu, 2011: 93-100) were used as indicators in explanations on the institutional adjustment determined by European multi-level governance framework influences on legislative patterns of interaction (Auel and Benz, 2005: 372-393), institutional adjustments as regards constitutional and administrative law and the dynamics of the national political system (Fink-Hafner, 2005). Political parties are also involved in these patterns of relations (Gherghe, 2013: 19-24). Implicitly, authors were interested in explaining the selection of diverging patterns of parliamentary-executive relations that had to cope with the dichotomic alternatives of either legitimacy deficit or European deception (Auel and Benz, 2005: 372-393). Changing patterns of governance brought about by Europeanization (Adshead, 2005: 159 178) or by the introduction of democratic and market-oriented institutions in the post-communist period were analysed in empirical studies aimed at developing models that can explain the adoption of new values and behaviours through institutional adaptation through learning processes or institutional changes (Aligica, 2003: 87 99). The post-communist import of democracy and democratic institutions, multi-party system and rule of law were milestones in the design of post-communist constitutional order (Olimid, 2014: 53-64), establishing a substantive correlation between quality national political institutions and citizens satisfaction (Desmet, van Spanje & de Vreese, 2012: 1071-1088). Constitutional principles, political institutions and the organization and functioning of public administrations follow distinct patterns for South-Eastern Europe new Member States (Gîrleșteanu, 2012: 71-107). Political institutions establishment and the patterns of legislative-executive relations explain the exercise and power of the scrutiny over European affairs through a principal-agent delegation model (Grossman and Sauger, 2007). Post-communist constitutional orders and constitutions-building had to be re-established in order to cope with the requests of sovereignty transfer as a prerequisite of the EU membership as regards South- Eastern Europe new Member States (Gherghe, 2012: 401-407, also Hungdah, 2004). 5

Studies on the implementation of European legislation aim at explaining the poor compliance to European requests, incremental changes and the use of veto right, or the opposite, the goodness of fit model (Bailey, 2002: 791-811) and patterns of collaboration between governmental actors and domestic not-state actors (Fischer and Sciarini, 2013: 1482-1498), founding researches on the dynamics of three types of determining factors institutional, political and substantive (Dimitrakopoulos, 2001b: 442-458). Incrementalism in national political systems dynamics highlighted the slow, small and marginal changes built on existing institutional repertoires, thus circumscribed in the pathdependence logic (Dimitrakopoulos, 2001a: 405-422). Conclusions: outlook on further research Re-configuring the conceptual map of European integration studies does not only mean narrowing or stretching the conceptual boundaries of Europeanization, as a leading theoretical explanatory approach of integration, but also attaching solutions to the democratic and legitimacy deficit of the European construction. Thus, the policy-making/policy-implementation aspects related to integration into supra-nationalism corroborate to identity-formation, citizenship-representation and political rhetoric. Institutions matter for the understanding of the integration dynamics, while the explanatory paradigm still requires the formulation or identification of a common European model suitable to foster convergence force. Acknowledgment: This work was supported by the strategic grant POSDRU/159/1.5/S/133255, Project ID 133255 (2014), co-financed by the European Social Fund within the Sectorial Operational Program Human Resources Development 2007-2013. REFERENCES Adshead, M., (2005) Europeanization and Changing Patterns of Governance in Ireland, Public Administration Vol. 83 No. 1, 2005: 159 178 (accessed 4.06.2014) Aligica, P.D. (2003) Operational codes, institutional learning and the optimistic model of post-communist social change. Conceptual criticism and empirical challenges from a Romanian case study Communist and Post-Communist Studies 36 (2003) 87 99 www.elsevier.com/locate/postcomstud (accessed 03.06.2014) Auel, Katrin (2006) Introduction: The Europeanisation of parliamentary Democracy, German Politics, 15:3, 249-268, DOI: 10.1080/13572330500273513 (accessed 18.06.2014) Auel, Katrin, Arthur Benz (2005) The politics of adaptation: The Europeanisation of national parliamentary systems, The Journal of Legislative Studies, 11:3-4, 372-393, DOI: 10.1080/13572330500273570 (accessed 10.06.2014) Bailey, Ian (2002) National adaptation to European integration: institutional vetoes and goodness-of-fit, Journal of European Public Policy, 9:5, 791-811, DOI: 10.1080/13501760210162366 (accessed 04.06.2014) Belloc, Filippo, Antonio Nicita & Pier Luigi Parcu (2013) Liberalizing telecommunications in Europe: path dependency and institutional complementarities, Journal of European Public Policy, 20:1, 132-154, DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2012.693409 (accessed 11.06.2014) 6

Benz, Arthur (2004) Path-Dependent Institutions and Strategic Veto Players: National Parliaments in the European Union, West European Politics, 27:5, 875-900, DOI: 10.1080/0140238042000283283 (accessed 04.06.2014) Berglund, Sara, Ieva Gange & Frans van Waarden (2006) Mass production of law. Routinization in the transposition of European directives: a sociological-institutionalist account, Journal of European Public Policy, 13:5, 692-716, DOI: 10.1080/13501760600808550 (accessed 04.06.2014) Böhm, Katharina, Claudia Landwehr (2014) The Europeanization of Health Care Coverage Decisions: EU- Regulation, Policy Learning and Cooperation in Decision-Making, Journal of European Integration, 36:1, 17-35, DOI: 10.1080/07036337.2013.793679 (accessed 10.06.2014) Borneman, John, Fowler, Nick (1997) Europeanization, Annual Review of Anthropology; 1997; 26, ProQuest Central pg. 487 (accessed 04.06.2014) Börzel, Tanja A., Thomas Risse (2000) When Europe Hits Home: Europeanization and Domestic Change, European Integration online Papers (EIoP) Vol. 4 (2000) N 15; http://eiop.or.at/eiop/texte/2000-015a.htm (accessed 12.06.2014) Boussaguet, Laurie, Sophie Jacquot, Pauline Ravinet (coord.), Dicționar de politici publice, Iași: Polirom, 2009. Bulmer, Simon J. (1998) New institutionalism and the governance of the Single European Market, Journal of European Public Policy, 5:3, 365-386, DOI: 10.1080/135017698343875 (accessed 16.06.2014) Bulmer, Simon, Burch, Martin (1998) Organizing for Europe: Whitehall, the British State and European Union, Public Administration, 76(4): 601 628, doi:10.1111/1467-9299.00128 (accessed 19.06.2014) Camyar, Isa (2010) Europeanization, Domestic Legacies and Administrative Reforms in Central and Eastern Europe: A Comparative Analysis of Hungary and the Czech Republic, Journal of European Integration, 32:2, 137-155, DOI: 10.1080/07036330903274664 (accessed 10.06.2014) Crespy, Amandine. (2011). European integration and resistance to institutional change: The politics of services liberalization in the European Union, The Minda De Gunzburg Center For European Studies at Harvard University CES Papers - Open Forum No. 7, 2011 (accessed 13.06.2014) Desmet, Pieterjan, Joost van Spanje & Claes de Vreese (2012) Second order institutions: national institutional quality as a yardstick for EU evaluation, Journal of European Public Policy, 19:7, 1071-1088, DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2011.650983 (accessed 11.06.2014) Dimitrakopoulos, Dionyssis G., (2001a). Incrementalism and Path Dependence: European integration and Institutional Change in National Parliaments, Journal of Common Market Studies, Vol. 39, No. 3, pp. 405-422 (accessed 11.06.2014) Dimitrakopoulos, Dionyssis G., (2001b). The Transposition of EU Law: Post-Decisional Politics and Institutional Autonomy, European Law Journal, Vol. 7, No. 4, December 2001, pp. 442-458 (accessed 04.06.2014) Duina, Francesco, Michael J. Oliver, (2005). National Parliaments in the European Union: Are There Any Benefits to Integration? European Law Journal, Vol. 11, No. 2, March 2005, pp. 173 195. (accessed 11.06.2014) Fink-Hafner, Danica (2005). Europeanization of the core executive in the transition from circumstances of EU accession to full EU membership, Paper to be presented at the EUSA Ninth Biennial International Conference, March 31-April 2, 2005, Austin, Texas. (accessed 16.06.2014) Fischer, Manuel & Pascal Sciarini (2013) Europeanization and the inclusive strategies of executive actors, Journal of European Public Policy, 20:10, 1482-1498, DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2013.781800 (accessed 11.06.2014) Gherghe, C. L. (2012) The evolution of Constitutionalism in Romania beyond 1989. Case study: The Constitution of 1965 and the Constitution of 1991. Revista de Stiinte Politice, (35), 401-407 Gherghe C L (2013). Institutionalization of the political parties: New legislative framework after 1989. Revista de StiintePolitice. Revue des Sciences Politiques (40): 19-24. Gîrleșteanu, George (2012). Drept constituțional și instituții politice, București: Universul Juridic. Gîrleșteanu, George (2011). Coordonate normative şi jurisprudenţiale în domeniul ordonanţelor de urgenţă, Revista transilvană de științe administrative / Transylvanian review of administrative sciences, No. 29, 93-100. Goetz, Klaus H., Jan-Hinrik Meyer-Sahling (2008), The Europeanisation of national political systems: Parliaments and executives, Living Rev. Euro. Gov., 3, (2008), 2 http://www.livingreviews.org/lreg- 2008-2 (accessed 17.06.2014) Grossman, Emiliano & Nicolas Sauger (2007) Political institutions under stress? Assessing the impact of European integration on French political institutions, Journal of European Public Policy, 14:7, 1117-1134, DOI: 10.1080/13501760701576593 (accessed 12.06.2014) 7

Haverland, Markus (2000). National Adaptation to European Integration: The Importance of Institutional Veto Points. Journal of Public Policy, 20, pp 83-103 http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_s0143814x00000763 (accessed 04.06.2014) Hungdah, Su (2004) Can constitution building advance European integration? A three pillared institutionalist analysis, Journal of European Integration, 26:4, 353-378, DOI: 10.1080/0703633042000306526 (accessed 10.06.2014) Jackson, Gregory, Arndt Sorge (2012) The trajectory of institutional change in Germany, 1979 2009, Journal of European Public Policy, 19:8, 1146-1167, DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2012.709009 (accessed 11.06.2014) Ladrech, Robert (1994) Europeanization of Domestic Politics and Institutions: The Case of France, Journal of Common Market Studies, 32/1, 69-88. Olimid A P (2014) The Import of the Rule of Law as a Democratic Tradition in Post-Communist Constitutional Usage: Charting a Multi-Level Theoretical Matrix, Revista de Științe Politice. Revue des Sciences Politiques (41): 53-64. Olimid A P (2011) Understanding EU conditionnality: A conceptual framework of national sovereignty and religious freedom (Romania case study). Revista de Stiinte Politice (32): 169-179. Puetter, Uwe (2008) Adapting to Enlargement: The Role of Formal and Informal Processes of Institutional Adjustment in EU Committee Governance, Journal of European Integration, 30:4, 479-491, DOI: 10.1080/07036330802294755 (accessed 10.06.2014) Radaelli, Claudio M. (2000). Whither Europeanization? Concept stretching and substantive change, European Integration online Papers (EIoP) Vol. 4 (2000) N 8;http://eiop.or.at/eiop/texte/2000-008a.htm (accessed 12.06.2014) 8