Revisiting the Dominant Discourse on Conditionality in the EU: The Case of EU Spending Conditionality
Cambridge yearbook of European legal studies2017Vol. 19, pp. 116–143
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2017 papers
Abstract
Abstract This article maps the rise of EU spending conditionality in the 2014–20 financial period and shows how the study of this novel type of conditionality adds to the dominant legal discourse on conditionality in the EU. It also suggests that the rise of conditionality may signal more profound transformations in the deep tissue of the EU, expressed by a transition towards a conditionality-based culture within the EU internal relationships.
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