
Saving EU digital constitutionalism through the proportionality principle and a transatlantic digital accord
Author(s) -
Jan Czarnocki
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
european view
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1865-5831
pISSN - 1781-6858
DOI - 10.1177/17816858211055522
Subject(s) - proportionality (law) , constitutionalism , fundamental rights , law and economics , political science , european union , legislature , scope (computer science) , european integration , political economy , international trade , economics , law , human rights , democracy , politics , computer science , programming language
The article explains the importance of the emerging movement for EU digital constitutionalism (EUDC), which reflects a Union-wide effort to address through regulation the challenges posed by digitalisation. The article outlines the core legislative acts that have been introduced by proponents of EUDC. It describes why EUDC is important for fundamental rights protection and European foreign policy, and how the ‘Brussels effect’ extends the impact of EUDC. It enquires into whether EUDC is sustainable, taking into consideration waning EU global influence and the need for economic growth. The EU needs to strike a balance between fundamental rights protection and economic growth. The proportionality principle is the right tool for this. A proportional approach should be followed in establishing a transatlantic digital accord with the US—an agreement on the basic principles governing the digital space. A more proportional approach will pave the way to such an agreement—giving EUDC a global scope.