Abstract
AbstractIn this paper, I investigate the attempts of the European Union to promote and entrench the rule of law standards in the Western Balkans countries. I examine the failures of legal reforms in key policy areas, such as the regulations of judicial independence, the legislative branch of government, vetting and suppression of corruption, that prevent progress in achieving the rule of law standards. I demonstrate how a narrow focus on the judiciary and its performance has harmed the standards. I propose a more specific focus on socio–economic reforms that, at first glance, appear less relevant to the rule of law. These are: higher education reforms, digitalization, decarbonization, and better targeting of anti-corruption measures. More focus on these areas allows a refocusing from a narrow conception of rule of law to other good governance reforms.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference86 articles.
1. Adler WT, Thakur D, Swift J (2021) A lie can travel: election disinformation in the United States, Brazil, and France. Konrad Adenauer Foundation
2. Agerberg M (2019) The curse of knowledge? Education, corruption, and politics. Pol Behav 41:369
3. Amnesty International (2023) “Trapped by automation: poverty and discrimination in serbia’s welfare state” (December 4, 2023). Outlining the use of algorhytm technology to exclude those living in poverty from access to services. https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/research/2023/12/trapped-by-automation-poverty-and-discrimination-in-serbias-welfare-state/
4. Apostolov V (2021) North Macedonia’s naivety about vaccine procurement costs country dear, Balkan insight. https://balkaninsight.com/2021/01/21/north-macedonias-naivety-about-vaccine-procurement-costs-country-dear/
5. Artis M, Banerjee A (2006) The central and Eastern European countries and the European union. Cambridge University Press