Abstract

Much has been written on the impact of European integration on member-states with regard to how European economic policies have liberalized national economies and how European institutional structures and policymaking processes have added a supranational dimension to national structures and processes. Comparatively little exists on how the changes brought about by European policies, structures and processes have in turn affected member states’ national patterns of policymaking. And even less focuses on the impact of all of this on each member-state’s particular formula for democracy.

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