Market Freedoms and ‘Democratically Sound’ Re-Embedding of Markets? The example of CETA
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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Market Freedoms and ‘Democratically Sound’ Re-Embedding of Markets? The example of CETA. / Glinski, Carola.
Economic Constitutionalism in a Turbulent World. ed. / Achilles Skordas; Gabor Halmai; Lisa Mardakian. Edward Elgar Publishing, 2023. p. 250-281.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Market Freedoms and ‘Democratically Sound’ Re-Embedding of Markets? The example of CETA
AU - Glinski, Carola
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Economic globalisation is increasingly perceived to threaten democracy and economic constitutions are increasingly perceived to be in a certain tension with democratic constitutional requirements. This particularly applies to the new comprehensive trade agreements of the EU, such as the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement’ (CETA) with Canada. This chapter assesses the provisions on regulatory cooperation of CETA with regard to the balance or otherwise they strike between the fostering of market access and the democratically legitimate consideration of other interests, such as environmental protection. To that end, it first introduces the CETA Agreement and its framework on regulatory co-operation, the institutional set-up, competences and substantive principles. Drawing from EU experience, the chapter then elaborates on legitimacy requirements for transnational economic agreements and presents relevant approaches towards achieving this aim, such as representation, horizontal legitimacy and deliberation as well as crucial challenges, before it applies these legitimacy considerations to the CETA Agreement and its provisions on regulatory cooperation and analyses the prospects for a democratically sound re-embedding of the transatlantic market. The chapter concludes that there are serious concerns with regard to both democratic representation and precaution-oriented deliberation in regulatory committees.
AB - Economic globalisation is increasingly perceived to threaten democracy and economic constitutions are increasingly perceived to be in a certain tension with democratic constitutional requirements. This particularly applies to the new comprehensive trade agreements of the EU, such as the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement’ (CETA) with Canada. This chapter assesses the provisions on regulatory cooperation of CETA with regard to the balance or otherwise they strike between the fostering of market access and the democratically legitimate consideration of other interests, such as environmental protection. To that end, it first introduces the CETA Agreement and its framework on regulatory co-operation, the institutional set-up, competences and substantive principles. Drawing from EU experience, the chapter then elaborates on legitimacy requirements for transnational economic agreements and presents relevant approaches towards achieving this aim, such as representation, horizontal legitimacy and deliberation as well as crucial challenges, before it applies these legitimacy considerations to the CETA Agreement and its provisions on regulatory cooperation and analyses the prospects for a democratically sound re-embedding of the transatlantic market. The chapter concludes that there are serious concerns with regard to both democratic representation and precaution-oriented deliberation in regulatory committees.
U2 - 10.4337/9781789907575.00019
DO - 10.4337/9781789907575.00019
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 978 1 78990 756 8
SP - 250
EP - 281
BT - Economic Constitutionalism in a Turbulent World
A2 - Skordas, Achilles
A2 - Halmai, Gabor
A2 - Mardakian, Lisa
PB - Edward Elgar Publishing
ER -
ID: 252517499