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Do Preliminary References Increase Public Support for European Law? Experimental Evidence from Germany
by
Krehbiel, Jay N.
, Cheruvu, Sivaram
in
Central government
/ Claims
/ Compliance
/ Court decisions
/ Courts
/ Empowerment
/ European law
/ Evidence
/ Government
/ International courts
/ International law
/ Judicial reviews
/ Jurisprudence
/ Justice
/ Law
/ Legal system
/ Legitimacy
/ Political factors
/ Politics
/ Public opinion
/ Research Note
2024
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Do Preliminary References Increase Public Support for European Law? Experimental Evidence from Germany
by
Krehbiel, Jay N.
, Cheruvu, Sivaram
in
Central government
/ Claims
/ Compliance
/ Court decisions
/ Courts
/ Empowerment
/ European law
/ Evidence
/ Government
/ International courts
/ International law
/ Judicial reviews
/ Jurisprudence
/ Justice
/ Law
/ Legal system
/ Legitimacy
/ Political factors
/ Politics
/ Public opinion
/ Research Note
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Do Preliminary References Increase Public Support for European Law? Experimental Evidence from Germany
by
Krehbiel, Jay N.
, Cheruvu, Sivaram
in
Central government
/ Claims
/ Compliance
/ Court decisions
/ Courts
/ Empowerment
/ European law
/ Evidence
/ Government
/ International courts
/ International law
/ Judicial reviews
/ Jurisprudence
/ Justice
/ Law
/ Legal system
/ Legitimacy
/ Political factors
/ Politics
/ Public opinion
/ Research Note
2024
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Do Preliminary References Increase Public Support for European Law? Experimental Evidence from Germany
Journal Article
Do Preliminary References Increase Public Support for European Law? Experimental Evidence from Germany
2024
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Overview
Explanations for the successful expansion and consolidation of the European Union and its legal system have long emphasized the importance of domestic courts’ sending preliminary references to the Court of Justice. Key to many of these theoretical accounts is the claim that domestic courts are better equipped than the Court of Justice to compel national governments to comply with EU law. Integrating insights from the comparative judicial politics literature into the context of the EU's preliminary references system, we provide a theoretical and empirical foundation for this claim by arguing that incorporating domestic courts into the EU legal process enhances public support for expansive judicial interpretations of EU law. We go on to argue, however, that this transfer of legitimacy depends on citizens’ views of the national and European courts. We support our argument with evidence from a preregistered survey experiment fielded in Germany.
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