Social Europe via EMU: Sovereign Debt, the European Semester and the European Pillar of Social Rights

Titolo Rivista GIORNALE DI DIRITTO DEL LAVORO E DI RELAZIONI INDUSTRIALI
Autori/Curatori Claire Kilpatrick
Anno di pubblicazione 2019 Fascicolo 2018/160 Lingua Inglese
Numero pagine 23 P. 737-759 Dimensione file 276 KB
DOI 10.3280/GDL2018-160003
Il DOI è il codice a barre della proprietà intellettuale: per saperne di più clicca qui

Qui sotto puoi vedere in anteprima la prima pagina di questo articolo.

Se questo articolo ti interessa, lo puoi acquistare (e scaricare in formato pdf) seguendo le facili indicazioni per acquistare il download credit. Acquista Download Credits per scaricare questo Articolo in formato PDF

Anteprima articolo

FrancoAngeli è membro della Publishers International Linking Association, Inc (PILA)associazione indipendente e non profit per facilitare (attraverso i servizi tecnologici implementati da CrossRef.org) l’accesso degli studiosi ai contenuti digitali nelle pubblicazioni professionali e scientifiche

History sometimes jumps. For EMU and Social Europe, that jump occurred in 2010. Since 2010, because of the nature of the EU institutional response to sovereign debt in its Member States, EMU has been one of the key drivers of Social Europe. The goal of this analysis is to explore the key manifestations of this new policy frame for Social Europe and how it fits with other Social Europe policy frames. I first briefly identify other pre-existing Social Europe policy frames. Three key manifestations of the EMU frame, sovereign debt conditionality, the European Semester and the European Pillar of Social Rights, are then analysed to consider the policy reach, distributive implications and normative bite of Social Europe via EMU.

La storia a volte compie dei salti. Per l’Unione economica e monetaria e per l’Europa sociale il salto è avvenuto nel 2010. Dal 2010, a causa della natura della risposta istituzionale data dall’Unione europea al debito sovrano nei suoi Stati membri, l’Unione economica e monetaria è divenuta uno dei principali motori dell’Europa sociale. L’obiettivo del saggio è quello di esplorare le principali manifestazioni di questa nuova cornice politica per l’Europa sociale e il modo in cui essa si adatta alle altre politiche dell’Europa sociale. Per prima cosa, si identificano brevemente le preesistenti politiche dell’Europa sociale. Quindi, si analizzano le tre principali manifestazioni dell’Unione economica e monetaria, vale a dire la condizionalità del debito sovrano, il Semestre europeo e il Pilastro europeo dei diritti sociali, il tutto al fine di valutare la portata politica, le implicazioni distributive e la stretta normativa che hanno coinvolto l’Europa sociale attraverso l’Unione economica e monetaria.

Keywords:Europa sociale; Pilastro europeo dei diritti sociali; Unione monetaria europea; Semestre europeo; Indirizzi per le politiche occupazionali; Linee guida Barroso; Linee guida Juncker del 2018.

  1. Sciarra S. (2000). Integration through Coordination: the Employment Title in the Amsterdam Treaty. CJEL: 209 ss.
  2. Sciarra S., ed., (2001). Labour Law in the Courts: National Judges and the ECJ. Oxford: Hart Publishing.
  3. Achtsioglou E., Doherty M. (2014). There Must Be Some Way Out of Here: The Crisis, Labour Rights and Member States in the Eye of the Storm. ELJ, 20: 219 ss.
  4. Costamagna F. (2013). The European Semester in Action: Strengthening Economic Policy Co-ordination while Weakening the Social Dimension. Centro Einaudi WP-LPF No 5/2013.
  5. Davies A.C.L. (2016). Job security and flexicurity. In: Bogg A., Costello C., Davies A.C.L., eds., Research Handbook of European Labour Law. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 217 ss.
  6. Davies P.L. (1992). The Emergence of European Labour Law. In: McCarthy W.E.J., ed., Legal Intervention in Industrial Relations. Oxford: Blackwell, 313 ss.
  7. Dawson M. (2018). New Governance and the Displacement of Social Europe: The Case of the European Semester. ECLR, 14: 191 ss.
  8. De Witte B. et al., eds., (2017). Constitutional Change Through Euro-Crisis Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  9. Giubboni S. (2015). Europe’s Crisis-Law and the Welfare State. ELLJ, 6: 5 ss.
  10. Joerges C. (2016). The European Constitution and Its Transformation Through the Financial Crisis. In: Patterson D., Södersen A., eds., Blackwell Companion to EU Law and International Law. Oxford: Blackwell, 242 ss.
  11. Keune M. (2015). The Effects of the EU’s Assault on Collective Bargaining: Less Governance Capacity and More Inequality. Transfer, 21: 477 ss.
  12. Kilpatrick C. (2016). The New Economic Component of EMU: A Lawful and Effective Design? EUI Working Paper, ADEMU Horizon 2020 Project Series.
  13. Kilpatrick C. (2017). Constitutions, social rights and euro-crisis law: a new area of constitutional inquiry. In: Beukers T., De Witte B., Kilpatrick C., eds., Constitutional Change Through Euro-Crisis Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 279 ss.
  14. Kilpatrick C. (2018). The Displacement of Social Europe: A Productive Lens of Inquiry. ECLR, 14: 62 ss.
  15. Kilpatrick C., De Witte B., eds., (2014). Social Rights in Times of Crisis: The Role of Fundamental Rights Challenges. EUI Working Paper 2014/05.
  16. Koukiadaki A., Kretsos L. (2012). Opening Pandora’s Box: The Sovereign Debt Crisis and Labour Market Regulation in Greece. ILJ, 41: 276 ss.
  17. Kovács E. (2016). Individual Dismissal Law and the Financial Crisis: An Evaluation of Recent Developments. ELLJ, 7: 368 ss.
  18. Laulom S. (2014). Dismissal Law under Challenge: New Risks for Workers. ELLJ, 5: 231 ss.
  19. Lütz S., Kranke M. (2014). The European Rescue of the Washington Consensus? EU and IMF Lending to Central and Eastern European Countries. RIPE, 21: 310 ss.
  20. Monteiro Fernandes A. (2014). Regressive Labor Legislation. The Magic Potion for All Crises: The Case of Portugal. CLL&PJ, 35: 397 ss.
  21. Pizzoferrato A. (2015). The Economic Crisis and Labour Law Reform in Italy. IJCLLIR, 31: 187 ss.
  22. Sacchi S. (2015). Conditionality by other means: EU involvement in Italy’s structural reforms in the sovereign debt crisis. CEP, 13: 77 ss.
  23. Suarez Corujo B. (2014). Crisis and Labour Market in Spain. ELLJ, 5: 43 ss.
  24. UN Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner (2013). Report on Austerity Measures and Economic and Social Rights.
  25. Wilkinson M. (2013). The Specter of Authoritarian Liberalism: Reflections on the Constitutional Crisis of the European Union. GLJ, 14: 527 ss.
  26. Yannakourou M., Tsimpoukis C. (2014). Flexibility without Security and Deconstruction of Collective Bargaining: The New Paradigm of Labor Law in Greece. CLL&PJ, 35: 331 ss.
  27. Zeitlin J., Vanhercke B. (2014). Socializing the European Semester: Economic Governance and Social Policy Co-ordination in Europe 2020. SIEPS, Report No 7, December 2014.

Claire Kilpatrick, Social Europe via EMU: Sovereign Debt, the European Semester and the European Pillar of Social Rights in "GIORNALE DI DIRITTO DEL LAVORO E DI RELAZIONI INDUSTRIALI " 160/2018, pp 737-759, DOI: 10.3280/GDL2018-160003