欧盟睦邻关系的内在层面:忠诚与价值观

D. Kochenov
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引用次数: 2

摘要

这篇文章认为,欧盟的法律背景与通常部署睦邻关系国际法原则的经典背景有本质上的不同,在很大程度上改变了对该原则的传统理解。首先,在联盟范围内做一个好邻居不仅意味着对-à-vis邻国尊重国际法并严格遵守惯例。它还必然意味着严格遵守欧盟的价值观,包括民主、法治和保护人权- -如果不是正义和少数群体保护的话。因此,在欧盟做一个好邻居意味着成为一种特殊类型的国家,接受一种特殊类型的宪政。其次,睦邻原则,特别是在欧盟扩大和欧盟公民身份的背景下,意味着成员国应该准备好调整其国家法律以适应联盟的现实,即使在欧盟收购的背景之外。换句话说,在不违反国际法或欧盟法律本身的情况下实施合法监管,仍可能违反欧盟范围内的睦邻关系原则。加入欧盟前在民主和法治领域的条件限制,以及最近斯洛伐克和匈牙利公民法的改革,都足以说明这一点。鉴于欧盟形成的相互依存的法律现实的特殊性,如果一些成员国未能内化这种特殊的欧盟现实,并造成负面的外部性,并开始影响其他成员国,那么期望欧盟进行干预是完全合理的。
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The Internal Aspects of Good Neighbourliness in the EU: Loyalty and Values
This contribution argues that the legal context of the EU is substantially different from the classical context within which the international law principle of good neighbourly relations is usually deployed, altering the traditional understanding of the principle to a great degree. Firstly, to be a good neighbour in the context of the Union implies not only respect for international law vis-à-vis neighbouring states and a strict adherence to the acquis. It also indispensably implies strict adherence to the values of the Union, including democracy, the rule of law and the protection of human rights – if not justice and minority protection. Being a good neighbour in the EU thus means being a particular type of state, embracing a particular type of constitutionalism. Secondly, the principle of good neighbourly relations, particularly in the context of EU enlargements and EU citizenship, implies that the Member States should be ready to adapt their national laws to the Union reality even outside the context of the EU acquis. In other words, having legitimate regulation in place, which is not in breach of international or EU law per se, can still amount to a violation of the principle of good neighbourly relations in the Union context. The examples of EU pre-accession conditionality in the fields of democracy and the rule of law, and of the recent reforms of the Slovak and Hungarian citizenship laws both suffice to make this point. Given the specificity of the legal reality of interdependence that the Union has shaped, it is perfectly legitimate to expect the EU to intervene should some Member States fail to internalise this special EU reality and cause negative externalities which start to affect others.
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