Ever-Closer in Brussels – Ever-Closer in the World? EU External Action after the Lisbon Treaty

EUI Working Papers LAW 2011/10

154 Pages Posted: 24 Aug 2011

See all articles by Joris Larik

Joris Larik

Leiden University

Madalina Moraru

Centre for Judicial Cooperation (RSCAS); Masaryk University - Faculty of Law

Date Written: August 19, 2011

Abstract

This edited Working Paper addresses three fundamental questions concerning EU External Action after the Lisbon Treaty: the institutional position and allegiance of the newly-established European External Action Service, the future of the ‘left out’ Directorate-General for Trade and the Common Commercial Policy, and the protection of EU citizens abroad. These enquires are prompted by both an institutional innovation – the launch of the EEAS – as well as by a number of substantive changes to the legal framework of EU External Action. An ambitious agenda has been inserted into the primary law, around which the Union institutions and Member States are to rally. It is in turn the raison d’être of the EEAS to foster the ensuing need for consistency, as well as to provide impetus to the EU’s external action. Structurally, it is in itself a sui generis institution composed of officials from the Commission, the Council and the Member States. This raises a number of fundamental questions that go well beyond those concerning which person is going to be the new EU ambassador in Washington or Beijing. Above all, can these substantive and institutional innovations live up to the grand ambitions of the peculiar entity that is the EU? What old problems does it purport to solve, and what are the new problems it is likely to create? Essentially, to which extent does bundling the external objectives in the Treaties as well as pooling together the institutional resources in Brussels and the delegations actually render the EU an ‘ever-closer’ actor in the world?

Keywords: Lisbon Treaty, EU external action, European External Action Service (EEAS), Common Commercial Policy (CCP), coherence, Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), Duty of sincere cooperation, Union citizenship, diplomatic and consular protection, Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), Operation Atalanta

JEL Classification: F02, F13

Suggested Citation

Larik, Joris and Moraru, Madalina, Ever-Closer in Brussels – Ever-Closer in the World? EU External Action after the Lisbon Treaty (August 19, 2011). EUI Working Papers LAW 2011/10, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1912494 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1912494

Madalina Moraru

Centre for Judicial Cooperation (RSCAS) ( email )

Via Bolognese 156 (Villa Salviati)
50-139 Firenze
Italy

Masaryk University - Faculty of Law ( email )

Veveri 70
Brno, 61180
Czech Republic

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