Making transnational markets: the institutional politics behind the TTIP

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 06-2017
Journal Europe and the World: A Law Review
Article number 4
Volume | Issue number 1 | 1
Number of pages 37
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR)
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Centre for the Study of European Contract Law (CSECL)
Abstract
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) may not bear fruit in its current incarnation, but it certainly teaches us crucial lessons regarding the institutional dynamics of market integration beyond the state. I argue that the TTIP’s so-called ‘regulatory cooperation’, in principle a mere mechanism for ‘discussion’ and ‘exchange’ between regulators, would have had a profound impact on the regulatory culture across the Atlantic. I make this argument in three interrelated steps. First, building on insights from constitutional law and political science, I outline an analytical framework for the study of rule-making institutions beyond the state. Second, I analyse the TTIP through the lens of this framework, illustrating the mechanisms through which its model for regulatory cooperation could reform the regulatory culture in the EU. Third, I argue that this change in the EU regulatory culture would have been neither an accident, nor a result of a US-led hegemonic project. Instead, the TTIP’s regulatory cooperation is a part of the EU’s internal political struggle, intended ultimately to re-balance not only powers between the legislative and the executive in the EU, but also within the EU’s executive branch itself.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.ewlj.2017.01
Published at https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/uclpress/ew/2017/00000001/00000001/art00004
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