What comes after the last chance commission? : policy priorities for 2019-2024 / edited by Steven Blockmans; Mehtap Akgüc... [et al.]
Publication details: Brussels : Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) , 2019 Description: 129 p. ; 24 cmISBN: 9789461387172Subject(s): Integración europea | Política comunitaria | Relaciones de la Unión Europea | Mercado únicoAbstract: Ahead of the 2019 institutional reconfiguration of the EU is a fitting moment to take stock of the European integration process and decide which priorities should define the strategic agenda of the next generation of incumbents. While acknowledging that the entire EU collective is concerned – member states and institutions alike – this report is addressed to the one actor that has a more direct role in fleshing out the policy agenda for Europe: the European Commission. This report assesses how the ‘last chance Commission’ of President Juncker has fared; whether it has followed the ten guidelines it set out at the beginning of its mandate; how far it was blown off course by critical events; and whether we might see the return of a ‘political’ Commission in the second half of this year.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Monografías | Biblioteca Central del MAEC Depósito | 60132 | Available | 1072351 |
Ahead of the 2019 institutional reconfiguration of the EU is a fitting moment to take stock of the European integration process and decide which priorities should define the strategic agenda of the next generation of incumbents. While acknowledging that the entire EU collective is concerned – member states and institutions alike – this report is addressed to the one actor that has a more direct role in fleshing out the policy agenda for Europe: the European Commission.
This report assesses how the ‘last chance Commission’ of President Juncker has fared; whether it has followed the ten guidelines it set out at the beginning of its mandate; how far it was blown off course by critical events; and whether we might see the return of a ‘political’ Commission in the second half of this year.