External Conditionalities and Institutional Change: Constructing Constituencies for the Rule of Law in Kosovo
External Conditionalities and Institutional Change: Constructing Constituencies for the Rule of Law in Kosovo
Author(s): Sandra F. JoiremanSubject(s): Gender Studies, Constitutional Law, Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Government/Political systems, Politics and law, EU-Accession / EU-DEvelopment, Sociology of Law
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: property rights; Kosovo; Western Balkans; EU; women;
Summary/Abstract: Kosovo is one of several Western Balkan countries that are part of the next round of accession to the EU. Like Bosnia, Serbia, and Croatia, it is also a country in which the history of conflict is recent and the benefits of EU membership ought to be a strong economic and political enticement to meet the standards necessary for membership. Yet, instead of major transformation of the post-conflict society towards democratization, economic development, and a robust human rights regime, the prospect of European Union membership appears to be leading to superficial legal changes without enforcement. This article investigates the tensions between internal challenges to legal change and external pressures for reform, adding to the literature on the decoupling of Europeanization and domestic change in candidate countries. A short analysis of one policy area, women’s property rights, illuminates the gaps between legal change and enforcement processes. The article also considers how and when a change in law can lead to social change. It is argued here that legal change in response to EU conditionalities may begin superficially, but creates an opportunity for collective action that can eventually lead to democratic change and a more robust enforcement of law.
Journal: East European Politics and Societies
- Issue Year: 30/2016
- Issue No: 02
- Page Range: 315-331
- Page Count: 17
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF