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Momentos estelares de Econolandia

Momentos estelares de Econolandia

"...Una lección de historia económica novelada"


El relax del economista

Memorias

Memorias

Economista formado básicamente en Francia, Samir Amin (El Cairo, 1931) es uno de los intelectuales más brillantes que ha dado la izquierda contemporánea. Autor de numerosas obras, su trayectoria ha estado fuertemente [...]

La elegancia del erizo

La elegancia del erizo

En el número 7 de la calle Grenelle, un inmueble burgués de París, nada es lo que parece. Dos de sus habitantes esconden un secreto. Renée, la portera, lleva mucho tiempo fingiendo [...]




A Constitution for the European Union


A Constitution for the European Union

ISBN: 978-0-262-02566-9
Materia: Unión Europea
Autor: Blankart, C.
Editorial: Mit Press
Edición: 2004
Páginas: 280
PVP: 41,80 €




Reseña:
The leaders of European Union member states have declared that a European constitution should take "a clear, open, effective, democratically controlled Community approach." Their goal -- that within the Union, "European institutions should be brought closer to its citizens" -- raises many questions about implementation. What is the most effective procedure for connecting citizens' preferences to political action and policy choices at the EU level? The contributors to this CESifo volume, internationally prominent economists and other scholars, address the major issues that arise in the writing of a constitution. They do so with the underlying assumption that individuals are rational actors and the goal of the state is to advance their collective interests.

The ten chapters consider such topics as how a constitution might be designed to prevent military conflict, whether the EU will evolve "by default" into a federal state, the apparent contradiction between the evolutionary development of the EU and the static structure of the constitution, the definition of citizenship and rights, the division and distribution of power, the budgetary deadlock on the provision of public goods and the redistribution of resources, coordinating policy, alternative methods for choosing an EU president, and the role of such direct democracy institutions as referenda and initiatives. The editors conclude by summing up the main arguments advanced to offer a unified sapproach to these issues.