The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the Legislature

The use of framework laws or 'skeleton' bills with lots of open texture and far-reaching delegation of rule-making powers to the executive, to independent agencies and to private rule-makers has started a process of the creeping 'deparliamentarisation' of legislation both at the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rob van Gestel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University School of Law 2013-03-01
Series:Utrecht Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.230/
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spelling doaj-df86a383580248bfa35c520e4a3b2c792020-11-25T03:53:47ZengUtrecht University School of LawUtrecht Law Review1871-515X2013-03-019210612210.18352/ulr.230221The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the LegislatureRob van Gestel0Tilburg UniversityThe use of framework laws or 'skeleton' bills with lots of open texture and far-reaching delegation of rule-making powers to the executive, to independent agencies and to private rule-makers has started a process of the creeping 'deparliamentarisation' of legislation both at the national and the European level. In the Netherlands the position of Parliament as a co-actor in the legislative process is enshrined in the Constitution but that does not seem to protect citizens against the outsourcing of legislative tasks to non-elected bodies. At the European level a primacy of the parliamentary legislature appears to be emerging. Especially Article 290 TFEU lays down conditions for the delegation of regulatory powers and provides the European Parliament and Council with some tools for monitoring and control. How do framework directives relate to these conditions and does the choice for framework legislation at the EU level also affect the primacy of the national legislature? The central claim of this contribution is that the concept of the primacy of the legislature, which is supposed to guarantee the democratic legitimacy of legislation, is itself poorly protected by the current constitutional rules and practices. Three ways to move forward will be sketched.http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.230/legislative primacydeparliamentarisationframework billsEuropeanisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rob van Gestel
spellingShingle Rob van Gestel
The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the Legislature
Utrecht Law Review
legislative primacy
deparliamentarisation
framework bills
Europeanisation
author_facet Rob van Gestel
author_sort Rob van Gestel
title The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the Legislature
title_short The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the Legislature
title_full The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the Legislature
title_fullStr The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the Legislature
title_full_unstemmed The ‘Deparliamentarisation’ of Legislation: Framework Laws and the Primacy of the Legislature
title_sort ‘deparliamentarisation’ of legislation: framework laws and the primacy of the legislature
publisher Utrecht University School of Law
series Utrecht Law Review
issn 1871-515X
publishDate 2013-03-01
description The use of framework laws or 'skeleton' bills with lots of open texture and far-reaching delegation of rule-making powers to the executive, to independent agencies and to private rule-makers has started a process of the creeping 'deparliamentarisation' of legislation both at the national and the European level. In the Netherlands the position of Parliament as a co-actor in the legislative process is enshrined in the Constitution but that does not seem to protect citizens against the outsourcing of legislative tasks to non-elected bodies. At the European level a primacy of the parliamentary legislature appears to be emerging. Especially Article 290 TFEU lays down conditions for the delegation of regulatory powers and provides the European Parliament and Council with some tools for monitoring and control. How do framework directives relate to these conditions and does the choice for framework legislation at the EU level also affect the primacy of the national legislature? The central claim of this contribution is that the concept of the primacy of the legislature, which is supposed to guarantee the democratic legitimacy of legislation, is itself poorly protected by the current constitutional rules and practices. Three ways to move forward will be sketched.
topic legislative primacy
deparliamentarisation
framework bills
Europeanisation
url http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.230/
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