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The European Parliament as a Defender of EU Values in EU-Japan Agreements: What Role for Soft Law and Hard Law Powers?

  • Autores: Elaine Fahey, Irene Wieczorek
  • Localización: European law review, ISSN 0307-5400, Nº 3, 2022, págs. 331-352
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • This article investigates to what extent the European Parliament (hereafter the Parliament) acted as an advocate for EU values in the development of EU-Japan relations, through which legal tools, if hard or soft law powers were used, and with what legal outcomes. Japan is an interesting, yet underexplored, case study for assessing the external resilience of EU values. It is a key transversal partner for the EU with three, potentially four, agreements concluded across trade, security and political cooperation sectors (the 2009 MLA agreement, the 2018 Strategic Partnership Agreement and Economic Partnership agreement and a PNR exchange agreement currently being negotiated), but which presents important values differences with the EU, e.g. on death penalty and data protection. Our findings show that, with Japan, the Parliament has stepped away from its traditional role as a human rights defender, by sticking to soft law powers as its privileged tool, limiting its interventions, and ultimately refraining from insisting trade be linked to human rights commitments. Such a cautious approach, we argue, is the result of a deliberate choice to keep negotiations with Japan in an economic prism, and to invest negotiation energy in more salient negotiations occurring at the time in which the EU-Japan agreement was negotiated, e.g SWIFT and Brexit TCA. The overall judgement on the Parliament’s approach is, however, a nuanced one. Its reliance on soft law powers might be a wise one for the time being and might encourage other actors to litigate on points which were compromised on, given that its previous use of hard law powers with the US and Canada PNR agreements somehow backfired. Moreover, the sole presence of hard law powers can, and has influenced other actors to adjust their positions during the negotiations to pre-empt the use of the Parliament’s veto powers.


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