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  1. Referendums in Eastern Europe : the effects on reforming the EU treaties and on the candidate countries' positions in the convention

    Albi, Anneli
    Florence, Italy : European University Institute, Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, 2002.

  2. EU enlargement and the constitutions of Central and Eastern Europe

    Albi, Anneli
    Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2005.

    This is the first book to comprehensively cover the adaptation of the constitution of Central and Eastern Europe for accession to the European Union. Key themes include sovereignty, legitimacy, supremacy, referendums, constitutional review, implication of the European Constitution, as well as constitutional issues of membership in NATO.In the wake of the EU's biggest enlargement, this book explores the adaptation of the constitutions of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) for membership in the European Union. In response to the painful past, these new constitutions were notably closed to transfer of powers to international organizations, and accorded a prominent status to sovereignty and independence. A little more than a decade later, the process of amending these provisions in view of the transfer of sovereign powers to a supranational organization has proved a sensitive and controversial exercise. This book analyses the amendments against the background of comparative experience and theory of sovereignty, as well as the context of political sensitivities, such as rising euroscepticism ahead of accession referendums.

    Online EBSCO Academic Comprehensive Collection

  3. EU enlargement and the constitutions of Central and Eastern Europe

    Albi, Anneli
    Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2005.

    In the wake of the EU's biggest enlargement, this book explores the adaptation of the constitutions of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) for membership in the European Union. In response to the painful past, these new constitutions were notably closed to transfer of powers to international organizations, and accorded a prominent status to sovereignty and independence. A little more than a decade later, the process of amending these provisions in view of the transfer of sovereign powers to a supranational organization has proved a sensitive and controversial exercise. This book analyses the amendments against the background of comparative experience and theory of sovereignty, as well as the context of political sensitivities, such as rising euroscepticism ahead of accession referendums.

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