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RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus cover
RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus cover
Making sense of EU - Institut d'études européennes of the ULB

RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus

RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus

20min |05/12/2023
Play
undefined cover
undefined cover
RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus cover
RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus cover
Making sense of EU - Institut d'études européennes of the ULB

RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus

RED-SPINEL - Episode 4: Making sense of Conditionality, EU governance, and Dissensus

20min |05/12/2023
Play

Description

One of the instruments of the European Union that provokes dissensus among Member States is conditionality. A tool for accountability for some, a threat to sovereignty for others, conditionality has been transforming EU governance. But how?   

In the fourth episode of the second season, to help us Make sense of conditionality and its use in EU governance, we welcome professors Cristina Fasone & Marta Simoncini, from LUISS Guido Carli University.  

We met during the Council for European Studies conference in Reykjavik, Iceland, where they presented the first research results for our Horizon Europe RED-SPINEL research project. 

Cristina Fasone is Associate Professor of Comparative Public Law and Director of the BA Program in Politics, Philosophy and Economics of the Department of Political Science. Her research focuses on parliamentary democracy in Europe, Constitutional adjudication and national and EU budgets.  

Marta Simoncini is an Assistant Professor in Administrative Law also at LUISS. Her research interests cover European law and administrative governance in the check-and-balances applicable to discretion, especially in the context of risk-based regulation. 


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

Description

One of the instruments of the European Union that provokes dissensus among Member States is conditionality. A tool for accountability for some, a threat to sovereignty for others, conditionality has been transforming EU governance. But how?   

In the fourth episode of the second season, to help us Make sense of conditionality and its use in EU governance, we welcome professors Cristina Fasone & Marta Simoncini, from LUISS Guido Carli University.  

We met during the Council for European Studies conference in Reykjavik, Iceland, where they presented the first research results for our Horizon Europe RED-SPINEL research project. 

Cristina Fasone is Associate Professor of Comparative Public Law and Director of the BA Program in Politics, Philosophy and Economics of the Department of Political Science. Her research focuses on parliamentary democracy in Europe, Constitutional adjudication and national and EU budgets.  

Marta Simoncini is an Assistant Professor in Administrative Law also at LUISS. Her research interests cover European law and administrative governance in the check-and-balances applicable to discretion, especially in the context of risk-based regulation. 


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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Description

One of the instruments of the European Union that provokes dissensus among Member States is conditionality. A tool for accountability for some, a threat to sovereignty for others, conditionality has been transforming EU governance. But how?   

In the fourth episode of the second season, to help us Make sense of conditionality and its use in EU governance, we welcome professors Cristina Fasone & Marta Simoncini, from LUISS Guido Carli University.  

We met during the Council for European Studies conference in Reykjavik, Iceland, where they presented the first research results for our Horizon Europe RED-SPINEL research project. 

Cristina Fasone is Associate Professor of Comparative Public Law and Director of the BA Program in Politics, Philosophy and Economics of the Department of Political Science. Her research focuses on parliamentary democracy in Europe, Constitutional adjudication and national and EU budgets.  

Marta Simoncini is an Assistant Professor in Administrative Law also at LUISS. Her research interests cover European law and administrative governance in the check-and-balances applicable to discretion, especially in the context of risk-based regulation. 


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

Description

One of the instruments of the European Union that provokes dissensus among Member States is conditionality. A tool for accountability for some, a threat to sovereignty for others, conditionality has been transforming EU governance. But how?   

In the fourth episode of the second season, to help us Make sense of conditionality and its use in EU governance, we welcome professors Cristina Fasone & Marta Simoncini, from LUISS Guido Carli University.  

We met during the Council for European Studies conference in Reykjavik, Iceland, where they presented the first research results for our Horizon Europe RED-SPINEL research project. 

Cristina Fasone is Associate Professor of Comparative Public Law and Director of the BA Program in Politics, Philosophy and Economics of the Department of Political Science. Her research focuses on parliamentary democracy in Europe, Constitutional adjudication and national and EU budgets.  

Marta Simoncini is an Assistant Professor in Administrative Law also at LUISS. Her research interests cover European law and administrative governance in the check-and-balances applicable to discretion, especially in the context of risk-based regulation. 


Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

Share

Embed

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