1. Introduction
The increasingly voluminous body of literature exploring methodologies for the study of EU law and the methodological richness with which EU lawyers have come to approach their discipline shows that EU legal scholarship has in recent decades undergone a profound methodological turn.Footnote 1 Legal scholars progressively use the tools and techniques from neighbouring disciplines – the social sciences, history, economics, philosophy, and so forth – mostly without compromising what arguably remains the most valuable tool in their toolkit: the doctrinal method. Exactly as one would expect, and hope, they use ‘non-doctrinal research methods as a complement, rather than an alternative, to the doctrinal method’.Footnote 2
But when should extra-legal methods complement the legal method? The answer may seem evident, namely: the doctrinal method adopts an internal perspective on the law, so it cannot be used to answer non-legal questions such as the following: How well do domestic actors comply with the decisions of EU institutions? Does EU law enjoy democratic legitimacy? How influential is the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU)? Doctrinal analysis may have a part to play in answering such questions but clearly cannot answer them in full. Moreover, doctrinal analysis may lead to a skewed understanding of the EU legal order if the studied cases are not representative of the larger class of decided cases, ie, if the method is not complemented by more systematic quantitative studies of all decided cases.Footnote 3 For example, while more expansionist CJEU rulings have created an image of an activist court, more systematic studies have recently shown that most judgements are steeped in judicial deference.Footnote 4 It is vital, as these examples show, that legal scholars understand the limits of the doctrinal method and use non-doctrinal methods to overcome these limitations.
In this article, I want to draw attention to another, seemingly less obvious limit of the doctrinal method, one that EU lawyers have found more difficult to accept. Many of us are steeped in a culture that values legal doctrine above almost everything else, and trained to think that any legal dispute must, by virtue of the very nature of law, be met with a legal judgement. Yet as I will explain, legal disputes over the allocation of authority between EU institutions can only be resolved by the exercise of political judgement. Bruno de Witte hinted at this recently when he argued that,
a positivist approach is appropriate for the study of EU law, provided that a sufficiently broad view is taken of what constitutes a legally relevant practice. I will argue that legal positivism and its corollary, the doctrinal legal method, should not be narrowly limited to the study and exposition of written legal norms, but should also include the study of institutional practices that are not, or only partially, based on legal norms. The reason for this is that positive EU law cannot properly be understood (and described) without knowledge of key institutional practices; the ‘black letter’ of EU law remains a dead letter without reflecting in its analysis the various practices which EU institutions develop in shaping and implementing the formal legal norms. These practices are not legal norms themselves, but they are not unlawful either.Footnote 5
His analysis is correct but only goes some way to appreciating the limits of doctrinal analysis. A fuller appreciation, I will argue, recognises not only that we need to understand key institutional practices to understand the positive law, or at least its application, but also, secondly, that lawyers cannot usually deduce from the positive law what is good institutional practice. This requires them to render political judgements about the relative merits of different institutions. It requires them, in other words, to accept that the doctrinal method is insufficient for answering many legal questions.
Is this pushing against an open door? Am I making an argument so obvious that it should not be made again? To some, no doubt. The point that doctrine does not determine every dispute is hardly controversial, and given some thought, the point that doctrine is not determinative of the allocation of EU institutional authority might seem evident too. And yet, as I will illustrate in section 2, EU legal scholarship dealing with questions of institutional balance frequently misses this point: it assumes that institutional balance is a question of legal judgement, to be resolved through doctrinal analysis. For this reason, I think it is worthwhile restating what might be obvious to some, simply because it isn’t obvious enough to many legal scholars studying EU institutional balance.
This article proceeds as follows. Section 2 briefly revisits the merits of the doctrinal method, emphasising the central role it has to play in the study of EU law and governance, before assessing some of its limitations, especially in relation to the resolution of legal disputes. These limitations will be illustrated using the issue of EU institutional balance, and more specifically the relationship between the EU legislature and judiciary, as the central case study. Many disputes the CJEU is asked to decide nowadays involve questions about the relative authority of the legislature versus the judiciary. I will explain that these questions, and hence the disputes themselves, require legal officials to exert political judgement. The next two sections discuss how this challenge can be met by exploring the evaluative and adjudicative value of political and constitutional theory and its methodologies for legal scholarship. In section 3, I argue that for our theories to have such value, they must be sensitive to the EU political setting and the constraints this setting imposes on what is realistically feasible. The aim of theoretical reflection must be to identify what should be in view of what is or could be. Finally, I argue in section 4 that the evaluative insights that can be drawn from theoretical disciplines can help guide the political judgements that may be needed in the resolution of legal disputes.
2. The doctrinal method: merits and shortcomings
The aims and tools of the doctrinal method have been described so extensively by others that I limit myself to briefly restating some of their accounts. The doctrinal method offers an internal perspective on the law. Lawyers use it, as Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. famously observed over a century ago, ‘to make known the content of the law; that is, to work upon it from within’.Footnote 6 The method thus in the first place allows us to describe and systematise the existing law, exposing the norms of EU law in a given area and organising them into a coherent set of legal concepts by studying how they interact and apply within the EU legal order.Footnote 7 However, the doctrinal method is valuable not only because it enables us to answer descriptive questions about what the law is and how it works; it can also be employed to provide an assessment of the law as is. It serves both expository and evaluative ends.Footnote 8 Or rather, it serves prescriptive and justificatory ends in addition to its descriptive end. Used prescriptively, the doctrinal method enables the search for legal and political solutions that offer the best fit with the existing system. That is, it can be used to prescribe how our legal and political institutions could and should act. Relatedly, the doctrinal method can also be used to assess the justification of legal decisions by reference to the legal system. Legal decisions are not law if they do not fit the existing system.Footnote 9 This, in a nutshell, is what doctrinal analysis allows.
The doctrinal method can easily fall victim to its own success. It is so ingrained in our approach to law, so internalised in our way of doing and thinking, that its significance for legal research and our responsibilities as legal scholars can easily be forgotten. Doctrinalism and related terms like formalism and legalism have taken on pejorative connotations, to describe vices as simplistic legal reasoning and the idolisation of the law. EU legal scholarship no doubt suffers from these vices too, but not because of doctrinal analysis as such (though maybe because of excessive reliance on it). An important element of what is (EU) law will be forgotten if its legalistic and formalistic side is not accepted.Footnote 10 Legal norms seek to restrict the choices of decision-makers, and it is the job of lawyers to identify the rules guiding and restraining decision-making. This requires a sound understanding of the law; indeed, it requires us to engage in doctrinal reasoning, which gives us the language to communicate with fellow lawyers and convince legal authorities of our views. It also allows us to impart legal knowledge to and train future generations of judges, lawyers and scholars. It does not seem far-fetched, therefore, to claim that mastery of doctrine gives us legitimacy as legal professionals – the capital to be seen as experts in our field.Footnote 11
The doctrinal method is key not just to legal scholars but also to scholars from other disciplines interested in legal institutions. It is noteworthy, I think, that while EU law scholarship increasingly relies on social science methods, political scientists and sociologists remain, as Julien Bois and Mark Dawson note, ‘focused on the actors impacted or involved in the legal process, giving little importance to the normative structure of the EU legal order’.Footnote 12 That is, they study institutional behaviour without taking seriously the law as an independent explanatory factor for what they observe. It may sell to say that judicial behaviour is a result of public opinion or judges’ desire for self-empowerment,Footnote 13 but often a straightforward legal explanation exists for the choices they make. Plausible theories of judicialisation are thus those that take seriously existing legal constraints and do not point to political or socio-economic explanations for judicial behaviour before the law has been excluded as an alternative explanation.Footnote 14 This requires social scientists to engage seriously with legal research as well as the methodology on which legal reasoning rests.
That said, while doctrinal analysis is an important part of the work of scholars interested in EU law and legal institutions, it need not be the be-all and end-all of our scholarship. Not all questions lawyers want to have answered are answerable from a doctrinal perspective, be they expository or evaluative. What is EU law’s impact on the regulation of labour relations? How much discretion does the CJEU enjoy in relation to national governments? Answering these questions requires a sound understanding of the norms of EU law involved, but they cannot be fully answered without the use of appropriate social science tools. Similarly, while the doctrinal method can serve evaluative tasks, it cannot serve any evaluative task, namely not those requiring an external viewpoint on the law. Should the CJEU afford national governments a greater margin of discretion? Should EU law strike a different balance between the internal market and the welfare state? Answering such questions would require using the proper methods of legal or political theory, perhaps in combination with those of the political sciences. It would not make sense to try answering these questions through a meticulous exposition of the Treaties.
The limits of doctrinal analysis, however, cut a little deeper. To illustrate this, take the allocation of authority between the EU legislature and judiciary.Footnote 15 How should the CJEU exercise its powers vis-à-vis the legislature? When should it afford deference to its choices and when, on the contrary, should it invalidate these through judicial review? Doctrinal analysis can shed some light on these questions. First, an exploration of the provisions laid down in the Treaties would allow us to identify the powers of EU institutions. We will learn that the European Parliament and Council jointly exercise legislative functions (Arts 14(1) and 16(1) TEU), and as we leaf further through the Treaties, we discover what powers the CJEU enjoys. It has the task to ‘ensure that in the interpretation and application of the Treaties the law is observed’ (Art 19(1) TEU), which may require it to invalidate legislation for ‘infringement of the Treaties or of any rule of law relating to their application’ (Art 263 TFEU). A doctrinal analysis of EU institutional power will also establish that all institutions must ‘practice mutual sincere cooperation’ (Art 13(2) TEU): ie, they must collaborate in the furtherance of supranational integration. Second, the doctrinal method may be of use in determining how the institutions must behave toward one another. Thomas Horsley has used the method to such prescriptive and evaluative ends, using the Treaties ‘as the principal touchstones for assessing the internal constitutionality, and hence legitimacy, of all Union institutional activity’.Footnote 16 His work shows the value of doctrinal reasoning in studying the relationship between EU legislative and judicial authority.
Yet the doctrinal method hardly allows us to establish what this relationship ought to be. By ‘ought to be’, I mean ought to be not in the sense of abstract normative theory but in the sense of the resolution of day-to-day legal disputes. The Treaties vastly underdetermine the allocation of legislative versus judicial authority. How much leeway must the legislature have in enacting provisions regulating (say) the internal market or fundamental rights? When must its decisions be struck down for violating the Treaties? What, in other words, should be the balance of legislation versus case law? These are the kind of questions underlying many of the disputes that appear before EU and national courts, and which the Treaties do not answer, no matter how often and closely we study them. Quite the contrary, as Martin Loughlin has argued, many legal disputes ‘invariably entail claims about the relative authority of case law versus legislation, of legislative will versus constitutional principles, of constitutional principles versus judicial precedents. These conflicts … cannot be resolved by legal method; they require the exercise of political judgment.’Footnote 17 EU lawyers who take the doctrinal path to find answers to these questions will therefore sooner rather than later get hopelessly lost.
However, EU lawyers interested in the allocation of institutional authority often still fail to recognise that not much can be said about the relative authority of EU institutions based on legal judgement alone. When this happens, it is typically assumed that the EU’s institutional balance can be derived from EU primary law, and especially from the hierarchical relationship between primary law and secondary legislation. To illustrate this, let us have a closer look at three monographs,Footnote 18 published in the last two years.Footnote 19
The view that the EU legislature’s relationship with the judiciary can be determined by primary law clearly underpins Ní Chaoim’s study of the exercise of judicial deference to secondary legislation in the internal market for goods. She offers an impressive analysis of the free movement of goods case law, showing how much self-restraint the CJEU exercises with respect to legislation, but her study falls short when it comes to the question of when deference is justified. She argues, for instance, that the CJEU must ‘consistently interpret EU product legislation or, where necessary, review it directly by reference to primary law’.Footnote 20 Likewise, she claims that ‘secondary rules cannot be relied upon to impose or maintain conditions contrary to the Treaty but must, where possible, be interpreted consistently with primary law’.Footnote 21 Such statements are correct but of little consequence. Secondary law can evidently not be used to amend primary law, but as contested provisions of primary law are usually highly ambiguous, this finding does not get us far. The relevant question is, instead, which institution gets to interpret such ambiguous provisions. Should that be the legislature or the judiciary? How much discretion must the legislature enjoy in that respect and when is it legitimate for the Court to strike down legislation using its power of judicial review? The answers to such questions cannot be found in primary law.
A similar problem besets Vėlyvytė’s attempt to define how the principle of institutional balance ought to guide the Court’s attitude toward legislation. She considers whether the Court should exercise self-restraint toward legislation but rejects this ‘restrictive approach’ as unsuitable ‘for defining the limits of judicial action at the EU level’ for the following reason:
Given the breadth of the Court’s mandate under Art 19 TEU and the breadth of the legislative mandate under the functionally broad legal bases, a degree of overlap between the powers of the two institutions is both inevitable and constitutionally justified. After all, the Court, as the interpreter of the Treaties, lays down the principles that guide the EU legislature in the adoption of legislative acts.Footnote 22
Vėlyvytė rightly appreciates the broad mandate of the legislature and judiciary under the Treaties, but she also assumes that the Treaties define how their mandates must be exercised. This, however, is left open by the Treaties; it is within the Court’s mandate to exercise self-restraint when its decisions would otherwise conflict with those of the legislature. Indeed, the institutional balance between the EU legislature and judiciary cannot be derived from primary law.
The third example concerns Spieker’s attempt to redefine the institutional balance between the legislature and judiciary. He distinguishes between provisions of primary law that give expression to a value protected by Article 2 TEU and other provisions of primary law and argues that this distinction would allow the Court to retain ‘strict scrutiny of provisions that give expression to an Article 2 TEU value [and] relax the constraints imposed on the EU legislature’ by other provisions.Footnote 23 He acknowledges that ‘there are arguments from legitimacy and from capacity in favour of the EU legislature’,Footnote 24 but he does not pursue this thought and instead presents his recalibration exercise as a purely legal exercise,Footnote 25 which, he suggests, flows from the hierarchy that Article 2 TEU imposes on the Treaty framework. Yet this argument is questionable, partly because it tries to regulate the relationship between EU institutions on the basis of legal rather than political considerations. Even if Article 2 TEU did draw a clear division between ‘constitutional’ and ‘non-constitutional’ provisions of primary law,Footnote 26 it would still not establish how strictly (or loosely) these provisions constrain the legislature. Spieker argues that the Court should have exclusive authority over ‘genuinely constitutional standards’ such as fundamental rights and subject legislation affecting such standards to ‘strict scrutiny’.Footnote 27 Yet the legislature does, as a matter of fact, exercise considerable interpretative authority over Article 2 TEU values, such as fundamental rights, and even if such values have higher moral status than the provisions of the EU’s economic constitution, it does not follow that review of these values should be strict. How strictly judicial review must be exercised depends on who, the judiciary or the legislature, is better at protecting and promoting EU values, which in turn depends on their relative institutional legitimacy and capacity to make the complex and controversial decisions involved in articulating them. These are political decisions that cannot be settled by reference to Article 2 TEU, nor by any other provision of primary law.
These examples illustrate that the institutional balance between the EU legislature and judiciary cannot be settled by imposing a hierarchical legal framework on it, nor can it be resolved by doctrinal analysis. The same is true for the allocation of EU authority more generally. How searching must the EU judiciary be in reviewing EU administrative decisions and the scientific evidence on which they are based? How much deference must it afford to the complex economic choices made by EU monetary institutions? In respect to such questions, attempts to induce standards of appropriate institutional behaviour from the Treaty framework ‘inevitably fail’.Footnote 28 In fairness, by comparison to scholarship on the allocation of EU legislative-judicial authority, the academic debate on the review of EU monetary and administrative institutions seems to be more aware of the political choices the CJEU faces. The key questions in these debates have been whether the EU judiciary, having regard to its legitimacy and expertise, is well suited to review monetary and administrative decisions, and what is, consequently, the appropriate standard by which to exercise judicial review.Footnote 29
It is important to clearly spell out the claim that legal officials must exercise political judgements when asked to decide on the EU’s institutional balance. It should not be confused with the legal realist claim that legal officials cannot keep their political beliefs at bay when applying the positive law. Rather, the point is that the relative authority of EU institutions and, relatedly, EU legal sources can be resolved only by the exercise of political judgement. My claim is also not a repudiation of positivist legal thought. De Witte, as we saw earlier, defends a positivist approach, along with its corollary, the doctrinal method, as appropriate for the study of EU law. Without wishing to contribute to the debate on the nature of law, legal positivists are not committed to such ‘positivistic adjudication’.Footnote 30 They acknowledge that judges have a responsibility to apply non-legal considerations when disputes cannot be resolved by the application of legal norms alone. They are aware, that is, of the limits of doctrinal legal reasoning. EU lawyers should be too. Doctrinal analysis alone is insufficient to decide disputes that concern disagreements about the allocation of political authority. Finally, my claim is not that the doctrinal method should be abolished or that legal reasoning can be reduced to political reasoning. Indeed, my claim is not that legal judgement is ultimately political judgement, but that a significant number of legal judgments rest on, and cannot be made without, some kind of political judgment. The challenge, therefore, is to integrate the positivist with the political in a way to better understand, critique, and inform the political choices underlying EU constitutional principles and practices.Footnote 31
3. What should be in light of what could be
The question, then, is how to exercise the requisite political judgement as a complement to the doctrinal method when it comes to resolving legal disputes involving questions of EU institutional balance. This depends on the issue at hand. Broadly speaking, we are here dealing with the question of comparative institutional choice,Footnote 32 which involves more specific questions about the relative institutional legitimacy and capacity of the institutional alternatives.Footnote 33 But which academic disciplines to inquire into depends on what institutional qualities we are interested in specifically. For example, if we think that decisions should ideally be taken by the EU institution that is all things equal most likely to generate its intended legal and social effects domestically, the insights from the EU compliance literature seem relevant.Footnote 34 If we think they should be taken by the institution that can reliably be trusted to make the best decisions, we want to compare the decision-making process of different institutions to see how they are structured and what kind of people are involved.Footnote 35 And lawyers interested in what is probably the most important political value underlying disputes over the allocation of EU authority, namely political legitimacy, should engage with questions of normative theory.Footnote 36
I want to dwell on this last point, the complementary value of political and constitutional theory for EU law and legal scholarship. It might be evident that these academic disciplines can have evaluative value. After all, normative theory, when applied to the EU, is essentially concerned with the question of what the EU should do: through what institutions and by what practices it should govern the affairs between and within the member states, how it should treat migrants at its borders, what principles should underpin institutional reform, and so forth. These are all evaluative questions that can allow us to shed light on existing legal principles and practices. I will also argue, however, that political and constitutional theory can have adjudicative value. There are enough legal scholars who still like to uphold the belief that an impenetrable wall exists or is to be erected between the disciplines of law and normative political theory, broadly conceived, and that the questions asked by these disciplines belong to different domains. However, since the resolution of legal disputes depends on normative political considerations concerning the institutional legitimacy and capacity of EU and national institutions, the questions that underlie the adjudicative process are very much alike those asked in political theory. As I shall argue in the next section, the insights of political theory may be brought to bear on adjudicative questions within EU law.
First, however, I want to specify in more detail how political theory can be employed in a way that it may generate useful, that is, legally relevant insights. There are, roughly speaking, two ways in which to apply it to contemporary legal and political questions. The first is to approach such questions in a highly moralised or idealised fashion, with the aim to find ideal solutions to problems or questions unburdened by the political situation in which a certain normative principle is invoked. This would amount to a kind of utopian theorising that is unrestrained by existing social and political facts, such as the existence of national communities with associated feelings of belonging and solidarity. While this might be a valuable way of approaching such questions, the insights of ideal theory are less likely to be relevant for lawyers, who are most likely more interested in the here and now. Another way is to adopt a (more) realist approach to political theory that is attentive to the social and political context as it exists and the constraints it imposes on what is realistically feasible. The aim then is to identify what should be in light of what is or could be.Footnote 37
Much of the more interesting constitutional theory on the European Union is realist in the proper sense of the term. It eschews moral idealism and takes seriously what Neil Walker called the difficulty of ‘translating’ the normative concepts of constitutionalism from domestic statal settings to the EU context and other transnational settings more generally.Footnote 38 Turkuler Isiksel, for example, has proposed a methodology she calls ‘reflexive readjustment’, which should allow constitutional concepts to be adapted to new settings without them losing the normative qualities that make constitutionalism valuable.Footnote 39 She has used it to both describe and better understand the unique constitutional features of the EU and to identify and address normative shortcomings of its constitutional structure. Numerous other scholars have followed the same path, liberating constitutionalism from its national straitjacket by reinterpreting constitutional concepts in a way that allows us to better understand and evaluate the constitutional processes and practices taking place within the EU.Footnote 40
The main difficulty in translating constitutional theories and concepts still is what Jo Shaw and Antje Wiener so aptly called the ‘touch of stateness’.Footnote 41 As they saw it, ‘stateness is the implicit reference of most work on the condition of “deficits”, including deficits of democracy, legitimacy, accountability, equality, and security’, which they claim ‘begs the normative response to overcome the deficit’.Footnote 42 It also remains, argues Filipe Brito Bastos, the implicit reference of most EU administrative law scholarship, which is judged ‘against the standard of the value choices commonly made by national administrative laws’.Footnote 43 The problem, according to Walker, is that this touch ‘is apt to compromise our understanding of non-state or post-state entities or processes’.Footnote 44 It is equally apt to compromise our evaluation of post-state processes and principles.
It is likely, of course, that certain concepts lend themselves to literal translation: ie, that their analytical or evaluative meaning is preserved without reflexive readjustment. The concept of the rule of law might be a case in point. It is conceivable that rule of law principles such as predictability, clarity, and coherence must take on the same meaning in post-national settings as in domestic contexts. Yet even with respect to such an everyday concept as ‘legality’ it has been argued that the ‘classic conceptual link between administrative legality and democracy is difficult to sustain under EU constitutional law’Footnote 45 (though, arguably, the understanding of democracy here is itself affected by a touch of stateness).Footnote 46
Other concepts, by contrast, lose much of their normative content if they are not adequately translated. Accountability might be one example of a concept requiring careful readjustment. Mark Dawson and Adina Maricut-Akbik have argued that reform proposals to make the EU’s monetary institutions more accountable should neither apply national accountability standards directly nor apply sui generis European accountability standards. Accountability standards derived from national settings cannot be easily realised in the EU institutional setting, while European accountability standards derived from the EU Treaties easily let monetary institutions off the hook. The solution, in their view, is to ask what accountability is good for and then study how the goods of accountability can be realised in the EU institutional structure.Footnote 47 Their solution, in other words, is to readjust general accountability standards to make them suitable for the EU.
Another, and perhaps even better example of a debate affected by the touch of stateness is the debate about the EU’s democratic legitimacy. It has been argued that the concept of democracy is untranslatable, because the EU would be bound to lack democratic legitimacy because of the absence of a collective European demos and a sufficiently developed transnational public sphere.Footnote 48 Others have argued that it has been mistranslated because the EU political process violates the standard conditions for democratic legitimacy: political equality and majority rule.Footnote 49 This would be because the representation of EU citizens in the European Parliament is degressively proportionate, overrepresenting citizens of less populous member states compared to citizens of any other member state (Article 14(2) TEU), and because the Council decides by qualified majority (Article 16(4) TEU). In other words, the EU would lack democratic legitimacy either by its very nature or because of its institutional design.
Such arguments forget that the EU political process is designed to fit the EU’s unique political situation. The EU does not treat its citizens as political equals because it has no unified demos and no integrated public sphere.Footnote 50 It adopts degressive proportionality and qualified majority voting for this reason, namely, to ensure that the national peoples can exercise shared and equal control over its political process. This is justified because EU citizens are still largely divided along national lines. Doing so does not weaken the EU’s democratic legitimacy, but rather strengthens it. It ensures that all national peoples – including those of smaller member states – have a substantial voice in the political process and can have their interests recognised. This arrangement may be second best from the viewpoint of ideal theory, but it is the ideal solution given the EU’s particular political situation.
An adequate translation of the concept of democracy to the EU setting not only improves our appreciation for the EU’s institutional design. It can also have considerable implications for how we evaluate the relative authority between EU institutions. If the EU political process is undemocratic, any power the judiciary exercises over this process will be easier to justify. It would mean, for instance, that the judicial review of legislation will not be vulnerable to the well-known objection of democratic legitimacy.Footnote 51 It might even mean that the EU’s legitimacy would be strengthened if political decisions get taken by the judiciary.Footnote 52 If, on the other hand, a correct translation of the concept of democracy shows the opposite, namely that the EU would enjoy a more acceptable level of democratic self-government when it exerts its authority through the legislative process, one would probably reach a different conclusion: it should then ideally be the legislature who defines the content of EU law and for the CJEU to exercise deference in the interpretation of legislation.Footnote 53 It would then also be desirable for the administrative branch to be subject to the authority of the legislative branch.Footnote 54 Clearly, much is staked on the correct interpretation of normative theories and constitutional concepts in the EU context.
4. The adjudicative value of political theory
These findings carry over to the adjudicative process. As I explained in section 2, not every legal dispute can be resolved by doctrinal reasoning alone. This may be self-evident, but many lawyers do not accept that extra-legal considerations or, more specifically, normative theoretical judgements have a role to play in the legal process. According to Von Bogdandy, ‘it is as essential that, in pluralistic societies, the legal principles keep their distance from philosophical and ideological discourses in order to remain potential projection screens for similar, but factually divergent constructs. Philosophical considerations are inappropriate in court judgments’.Footnote 55 Moreover, even those who believe that ‘the autonomy of legal scholarship is not necessarily compromised by complementing robust legal analysis with the analysis of neighbouring disciplines’ may argue that ‘from the point of view of a doctrinal approach … the role of extralegal perspectives can only be instrumental and subordinate’.Footnote 56 They may find, that is, that ‘the main difference between [law and … scholarship], on the one hand, and traditional legal scholarship, on the other, is that they ask different research questions’.Footnote 57 The argument of “law and …scholarship” ‘may still be normative, but it remains outside the realm of legal analysis’.Footnote 58
Yet my analysis suggests that political theory can – and indeed may – at some point enter the realm of legal analysis and inform the political judgements needed to render legal judgement. No bright line can be drawn between the disciplines of law and political theory. Nor should we try to erect one, aiming for the unachievable ideal of doctrinal purity at the expense of transparency and informed legal judgement. To see how blurred the boundary between both disciplines is, let us return to the question of the proper relationship between the EU legislature and judiciary. This relationship cannot be inferred from the Treaties or any other norm of primary law, and so the question is by what standards and principles to determine, instead, whether secondary legislation should be applied. The question is essentially, therefore, what policy issues should be left to legislation because the legislature has more expertise and legitimacy to decide these issues and when, instead, matters are best settled by the judiciary. The CJEU itself seems to recognise, at least implicitly,Footnote 59 that this is a political question pertaining to its legitimacy vis-à-vis the legislative process. For example, it allows the legislature ‘broad discretion in areas in which its action involves political, economic and social choices and in which it is called upon to undertake complex assessments and evaluations’,Footnote 60 but not when legislation encroaches on fundamental rights; then the legislature’s ‘discretion may prove to be limited’.Footnote 61
But how do we, lawyers, evaluate these choices and how can judges decide what are the proper standards by which to review legislation, given that these choices cannot be made from within the law? There is a gigantic literature from domestic constitutional and political theory on the proper role of the legislative and judicial branches, on the justification of judicial review, on the virtues of judicial deference, and so forth. This is not the place to examine this literature. Instead, what I am interested in is why we lawyers should not try to learn from them, from theorists and their normative debates, and use the evaluative yardsticks that their scholarship provides in our own work, as academic scholars but also as practicing lawyers. The questions theorists ask are very similar to those the Court must answer in disputes about the appropriate relationship of legislation and case law, though they may think at a more abstract level or focus on other legal settings than the EU legal order. Controversial questions of translation therefore seem inevitable, and a uniquely correct answer may not be available. But what alternatives do we have but to rely as best as we can on the insights of such extra-legal disciplines when the law does not answer the legal questions we are supposed to answer? Engage in uninformed reasoning? Present our answers as if they are directly derived from the law, nurturing the antiquated idea of ‘constitutional law without politics’.Footnote 62 Or will we be transparent about the kind of political decisions that are – and must be – made in resolving legal disputes, and accept that, by taking the insights of other disciplines into account, we can come ‘to more informed and more balanced judgment’?Footnote 63
The same goes for the debate on the accountability of economic and monetary governance, touched upon earlier. Dawson and Maricut-Akbik liberally draw on normative political theory in their examination of the point of accountability, by which they seek to yield better yardsticks for how EU monetary institutions should be held accountable for their decisions, including, if not especially, by the EU Court of Justice. To anyone who believes that there is no place for philosophical considerations in the judicial process, the question is what disciplines and methodologies to rely on instead to make well-informed legal judgments. It cannot be the discipline of law and the legal method. Therefore, since political theory already provides evaluative yardsticks to critically examine the political choices that adjudication entails, it seems inconsistent to stop here and not take the small additional step of letting these yardsticks help orient the resolution of legal disputes. Their resolution entails the exercise of political and moral judgement, so why not cut across the disciplinary boundaries of law and political theory to benefit from the latter’s insights? Often, the CJEU must answer questions not dissimilar to those asked by political theorists. Thus, being explicit about the adjudicative value of political theory need not change how adjudication unfolds. It could simply facilitate reflection on the political choices that underlie legal adjudication and how these choices can be best exercised within the particular EU context.
I do not think that my observations are limited to the issue of EU institutional balance. Space constraints prevent me from going into detail, but let me give one example to illustrate this: the legality of headscarf bans at work, a contentious issue that the CJEU has struggled with mightily in recent years.Footnote 64 EU anti-discrimination law does not provide a clear-cut answer as to whether such bans are lawful. It protects religion and belief from direct and indirect discrimination alongside other personal characteristics such as disability and age, with the justificatory burden being higher for direct than indirect discrimination, but this knowledge alone is not enough to determine when headscarf bans are lawful. The CJEU also needed to reflect on questions such as the following: How protection-worthy are religious beliefs and practices? What weight should be given to the distinction between direct and indirect discrimination? How high is the justificatory burden for policies that inflict harm on religious minorities? To answer these questions, it had to identify the moral wrongs that the law seeks to remedy. In other words, it had to answer questions not unlike those asked by theorists of discrimination law.Footnote 65 The understanding they have developed of the above questions could enrich the legal debate and hence the resolution of disputes that require reflection on the deeper justificatory rationale for the enactment of anti-discrimination norms. It would be a shame, in my view, not to use these insights when these could improve our own, as a complement to the doctrinal method when the latter is unable to furnish the necessary answers to legal questions.
5. Conclusion
I have explained that, because EU law vastly underdetermines the proper allocation of EU institutional authority, the doctrinal method cannot be used to conclusively answer legal disputes whose resolution depends on how authority gets allocated. In addition, I have advocated using the insights and methods of political and constitutional theory as a complement to the doctrinal method in such disputes. When correctly translated to the EU setting, political theory can have both evaluative and adjudicative value. Incorporating the insights of political theory into adjudicative process should not significantly change how disputes will be decided. The CJEU already makes political judgements in the decisions it takes, so it would mainly allow it to be more transparent about the political choices involved and to reach more informed judgements.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank the organisers of the Conference ‘New Interdisciplinary Perspectives in European Union Law’ for inviting me to develop the ideas presented in this paper and for their feedback.
Funding statement
None.
Competing interests
The author has no conflicts of interest to declare.