Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain Outcome

The article focuses on the statutory implementation practice of EU legislation in the Czech Republic based on statistical evidence. The main focus is a comparison of the length of the legislative procedure in the Parliament from 2010–2021, i.e. three election periods of the Chamber of Deputies, whic...

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Main Author: Říha Michal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2024-10-01
Series:Wroclaw Review of Law, Administration and Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/wrlae-2022-0027
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author Říha Michal
author_facet Říha Michal
author_sort Říha Michal
collection DOAJ
description The article focuses on the statutory implementation practice of EU legislation in the Czech Republic based on statistical evidence. The main focus is a comparison of the length of the legislative procedure in the Parliament from 2010–2021, i.e. three election periods of the Chamber of Deputies, which is the dominant body of law-making in the Czech Republic. In conclusion, the author describes an unusually lengthy implementation process and analyses possible reasons for one of the worst transposition-on-time results within the EU. However, he refutes the claim that the transposition deficit is mostly caused by the Parliament.
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spelling doaj-art-41e082200fb7490ea9e5e9fc396ca4542025-02-10T13:26:27ZengSciendoWroclaw Review of Law, Administration and Economics2084-12642024-10-01141233810.2478/wrlae-2022-0027Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain OutcomeŘíha Michal0Ph.D., Department of European Law, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic.The article focuses on the statutory implementation practice of EU legislation in the Czech Republic based on statistical evidence. The main focus is a comparison of the length of the legislative procedure in the Parliament from 2010–2021, i.e. three election periods of the Chamber of Deputies, which is the dominant body of law-making in the Czech Republic. In conclusion, the author describes an unusually lengthy implementation process and analyses possible reasons for one of the worst transposition-on-time results within the EU. However, he refutes the claim that the transposition deficit is mostly caused by the Parliament.https://doi.org/10.2478/wrlae-2022-0027transpositioneu directivetransposition deficitparlamentarism
spellingShingle Říha Michal
Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain Outcome
Wroclaw Review of Law, Administration and Economics
transposition
eu directive
transposition deficit
parlamentarism
title Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain Outcome
title_full Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain Outcome
title_fullStr Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain Outcome
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain Outcome
title_short Implementation of EU Acts in the Czech Parliament: A Slow and Laborious Quest with an Uncertain Outcome
title_sort implementation of eu acts in the czech parliament a slow and laborious quest with an uncertain outcome
topic transposition
eu directive
transposition deficit
parlamentarism
url https://doi.org/10.2478/wrlae-2022-0027
work_keys_str_mv AT rihamichal implementationofeuactsintheczechparliamentaslowandlaboriousquestwithanuncertainoutcome