Good Governance , Concept & Context

Page 268

16 Implementation of Good Governance Principles on the European Level In Chapter 3 we described two important developments in relation to the development of the concept of good governance. The first was related to the focus on good administration on the European level, which was not only developed by the European administrative institutions but also by the legislative and judiciary power on the European level. For that reason, we speak here about the development of good governance on the European level in a narrow sense. In the broader sense, the principles of good governance are also the normative framework for the other powers in the state apart from the administration. The second development was, due to the special legal regime of the European Union and the implementation obligations on the national level, the Europeanization of good governance in which the member states have their own implementation of good governance albeit under the supervision of the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg. In this chapter, the focus is on the implementation of the principles of good governance, in this context the administrative principles, by the European administrative institutions and the controlling institutions like the European Court of Justice and the European Ombudsman. Nevertheless, the Treaty of Lisbon contains quite a number of rules and obligations in respect of the implementation of the principles of good governance. In that sense, the principle of transparency has found its symbolic expression in the most prominent place of article 1, paragraph 2 TFEU. Equally fundamental is the acknowledgement of the principles of political participation embodied in article 11 TEU. Notably the obligation of the European institutions to hold public hearings with representative associations and to communicate with civil society on a transparent and regular basis are among these principles. The right of access to documents of the Union’s institutions has now been recognized as a fundamental rule in article 15 TFEU. Furthermore, according to article 16, paragraph 8 TEU the European Council of ministers has to meet in public when acting as a legislator. These Treaty rules are complemented by the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union which has entered into force with the final ratification of the Lisbon Treaty. The chapter on citizen’s rights contains an impressive declaration of rights, such as the right to vote and to stand as a candidate at elections to the European Parliament and at municipal elections in articles 39 and 40. The right to good administration can be found in article 41 and the right of access to documents is embodied in article 42. This list is completed by the right to refer cases of maladministration to the European Ombudsman in article 43 and by the right to petition guaranteed by article 44. In particular, the right to good administration is worth noting. It gives every person the right to have his or her affairs handled impartially, fairly and within a reasonable time frame by the institutions of the Union. This includes the right of every person to be heard before any individual measure is taken which would entail adverse effects, the right of a person to have access to his or her file while respecting the legitimate interests of confidentiality and of professional and business secrecy and, finally, the obligation of the Good Governance: Concept and Context. Henk Addink. © Henk Addink 2019. Published 2019 by Oxford University Press.


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Articles inside

Index

44min
pages 332-353

Bibliography

38min
pages 306-331

Governance

14min
pages 301-305

2. Part II: The Specification of the Principles of Good Governance

8min
pages 298-300

4. Conclusions

9min
pages 291-294

of Human Rights

2min
page 290

2. Good Governance in International Case Law

2min
page 289

Ombudsman

17min
pages 280-285

4. Conclusions

3min
pages 286-287

Court of Justice

30min
pages 270-279

Institutions

2min
page 269

16. Implementation of Good Governance Principles on the European Level

2min
page 268

5. Conclusions

2min
pages 266-267

South Africa

13min
pages 261-265

3. Implementation of the Good Governance Principles in Canada

21min
pages 253-260

7. Conclusions

12min
pages 220-224

2. Implementation of Good Governance in Northern Europe

2min
page 226

6. Cases about the Implementation of Good Governance Principles

5min
pages 218-219

5. Different Developments in the Practices of Different Countries

2min
page 217

2. Concept and Principles of Good Governance and Integrity

2min
page 212

Practices of Good Governance

6min
pages 214-216

the Non-EU Country Studies

1min
page 213

1. Good Governance: The Need and the Practical Relevance

2min
page 211

6. Conclusions

1min
pages 207-209

5. Sources of the Principle of Human Rights

14min
pages 201-206

3. Specification of the Concept

2min
page 198

2. The Concept of the Principle of Human Rights

2min
page 197

4. Institutions Involved

4min
pages 199-200

6. Conclusions

1min
page 195

5. Sources of the Principle of Accountability

5min
pages 193-194

2. The Concept of Accountability

5min
pages 183-184

6. Sources of the Principle of Effectiveness

5min
pages 179-180

7. Conclusions

1min
page 181

5. Institutions Involved

10min
pages 175-178

4. Specification of this Concept

2min
page 174

3. The Concept of Effectiveness

12min
pages 170-173

6. Conclusions

3min
pages 164-165

2. Development of the Principle of Effectiveness

5min
pages 168-169

3. Specification of the Concept

10min
pages 157-160

5. Sources of the Principle of Participation

5min
pages 162-163

4. Institutions Involved

2min
page 161

1. The Development of the Principle of Participation

2min
page 155

9. The Principle of Participation

2min
page 154

2. The Concept of Participation

2min
page 156

6. Conclusions

2min
pages 152-153

5. Sources of the Principle of Transparency

20min
pages 145-151

4. Institutions Involved

8min
pages 142-144

3. Specification of the Concept

7min
pages 139-141

2. The Concept of Transparency

5min
pages 137-138

2. The Concept of Properness

2min
page 125

5. Conclusions

1min
pages 121-123

3. Specification of the Concept

21min
pages 126-133

3. Democracy and Transparency

2min
page 119

4. Democracy and Participation

2min
page 120

2. Democracy: Direct and Representative

2min
page 118

6. The Role of Good Governance Related to these Developments

2min
page 114

7. Conclusions

1min
page 115

3. Rule of Law and Rechtsstaat: Specification of Differences

5min
pages 106-107

5. Difficulties and Developments of the Traditional Rule of Law

5min
pages 112-113

4. Rule of Law and Rechtsstaat: Formal and Substantial Perspectives

11min
pages 108-111

2. Different Historical Roots and Traditional Perspectives

2min
page 105

7. Conclusions

3min
pages 98-99

5. Good Governance and Integrity

18min
pages 89-95

4. The Nature of Principles in the Legal Theory

7min
pages 86-88

3. The Relationship between Law and Values

5min
pages 84-85

6. Conclusions

4min
pages 78-79

5. Good Governance on the International Level

12min
pages 73-77

2. Dworkin and Hart

8min
pages 81-83

4. Good Governance on the European Union Level

14min
pages 68-72

3. Good Governance and the Europeanization of National Law

4min
pages 66-67

2. Good Governance on the National Level in Europe

25min
pages 57-65

7. Conclusions

2min
page 49

4. Good Governance and the Main Developments

9min
pages 34-36

2. Concept of Good Governance

8min
pages 41-43

6. Conclusions

3min
pages 38-39

4. Institutions Involved within a Framework of Checks and Balances

6min
pages 45-47

Implementation of Good Governance in the United Kingdom

2min
page 31

2. Good Governance and Law

2min
page 30

5. Structure of the Three Parts of this Book

2min
page 37

3. Specification of the Principles of Good Governance

2min
page 44
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