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The journey of EU criminal law on the ship of fools – what are the implications for supranational governance of EU criminal justice agencies?

Öberg, Jacob LU and Harding, Chris (2021) In Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law 28(2). p.192-211
Abstract
This article addresses supranational governance of EU criminal justice agencies from the perspective of the various agencies of policy and rulemaking who have contributed to the impressive developments in the field of EU criminal law. Taking as a working hypothesis the happenstance and haphazard character of this field of policy and law, it suggests that there is an absence of design. In the discussion the article proposes the Platonic analogy of the ‘ship of fools’ (Plato, Republic, Book VI) as an explanatory tool. The ship's captain is the guiding spirit of criminal law, but the crew of the ship, who have the power to take control, have diverse interests and ideas about how the ship should be taken to sea and navigated. The article... (More)
This article addresses supranational governance of EU criminal justice agencies from the perspective of the various agencies of policy and rulemaking who have contributed to the impressive developments in the field of EU criminal law. Taking as a working hypothesis the happenstance and haphazard character of this field of policy and law, it suggests that there is an absence of design. In the discussion the article proposes the Platonic analogy of the ‘ship of fools’ (Plato, Republic, Book VI) as an explanatory tool. The ship's captain is the guiding spirit of criminal law, but the crew of the ship, who have the power to take control, have diverse interests and ideas about how the ship should be taken to sea and navigated. The article addresses thematically and chronologically the development of EU criminal policy by means of this framework. Subsequently it discusses the extent to which the ‘ship of fools’ analogy is relevant to the development of EU criminal justice agencies, and to the emergence of a European Public Prosecutor. Underlying all this discussion is the uneasy sense that the true pilot of EU criminal law and policy has been displaced, in particular by ‘instrumental’ pilots of securitisation and effectiveness. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
EU law, EU-rätt
in
Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law
volume
28
issue
2
pages
192 - 211
publisher
Intersentia
external identifiers
  • scopus:85105084354
ISSN
1023-263X
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
40799ee8-bdc8-4748-8142-5d24f6061921
date added to LUP
2021-04-23 17:55:31
date last changed
2022-04-27 01:41:23
@article{40799ee8-bdc8-4748-8142-5d24f6061921,
  abstract     = {{This article addresses supranational governance of EU criminal justice agencies from the perspective of the various agencies of policy and rulemaking who have contributed to the impressive developments in the field of EU criminal law. Taking as a working hypothesis the happenstance and haphazard character of this field of policy and law, it suggests that there is an absence of design. In the discussion the article proposes the Platonic analogy of the ‘ship of fools’ (Plato, Republic, Book VI) as an explanatory tool. The ship's captain is the guiding spirit of criminal law, but the crew of the ship, who have the power to take control, have diverse interests and ideas about how the ship should be taken to sea and navigated. The article addresses thematically and chronologically the development of EU criminal policy by means of this framework. Subsequently it discusses the extent to which the ‘ship of fools’ analogy is relevant to the development of EU criminal justice agencies, and to the emergence of a European Public Prosecutor. Underlying all this discussion is the uneasy sense that the true pilot of EU criminal law and policy has been displaced, in particular by ‘instrumental’ pilots of securitisation and effectiveness.}},
  author       = {{Öberg, Jacob and Harding, Chris}},
  issn         = {{1023-263X}},
  keywords     = {{EU law; EU-rätt}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{192--211}},
  publisher    = {{Intersentia}},
  series       = {{Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law}},
  title        = {{The journey of EU criminal law on the ship of fools – what are the implications for supranational governance of EU criminal justice agencies?}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/97027519/Ship_of_Fools_MJ.pdf}},
  volume       = {{28}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}