A. Introduction
In the system of executive federalismFootnote 1 set up by the treaties, it is the Member States that are primarily responsible for the implementation of EU law at the domestic level. Instances of centralized administration are the exception in the broader EU administrative framework. However, beyond the dichotomy of “direct vs. indirect administration,” increasingly more forms of “shared administration” have emerged, where national and EU authorities cooperate with various intensities, in various ways, and at different moments of the decision-making process, in the implementation of EU law. In this context, a multi-level system of cooperation is being shaped that encompasses various levels: The regional/local, the national, and the EU levels. In this dense, multi-level administrative framework, administrative authorities at various levels of governance cooperate in putting EU law into effect. At the same time, and though not necessarily linked to the phenomenon of “shared administration,” EU law has also contributed to the shaping of a system of “transnational administration,” which refers to the possibility for an administrative act to have effect beyond its territory, with or without the need for recognition by the receiving Member State.
This Special Issue aims at examining the judicial and extra-judicial challenges arising from this complex and multi-layered system of cooperation. Its point of departure is, first, the observation that the administrative cooperation in the EU is multi- and cross-level, namely arising from the vertical cooperation between EU and national authorities or from the horizontal cooperation between national authorities themselves. Second, underlying the path of enquiry is the observation that, in the EU multi-level action, there might be decisions affecting natural and legal persons which cannot be judicially reviewed in an effective way. Third, in areas of extra-judicial cooperation, the lack of common standards or practices across Member States may undermine the effectiveness of EU policies and objectives.
The system of shared administration is present nowadays in virtually all EU policy fields, albeit with various shapes and intensities, such as competition law, the system of authorizations for the marketing of pharmaceutical products or genetically modified organisms (GMOs), data protection, the allocation of funds, and asylum policy. This Special Issue takes stock of this diversity, yet it does not aim to provide an all-encompassing overview of the system of shared administration in the European Union and its judicial and non-judicial challenges. Rather, it aims to go beyond the specific policy fields and tackle broad phenomena in the EU multi- and cross-level administrative framework.
In order to do so, this Special Issue discusses the rapidly emerging paradigm of transnational administrative acts (Dubos and Chevalier), the mechanism of mutual recognition in the European administrative space (Arroyo-Jiménez), the cooperation mechanisms in inspection activities (De Bellis) and in the field of maladministration (Athanasiadou and Vogiatzis), as well the implications of the system of shared administration for the control over the EU budget (Cipriani).
Furthermore, this Special Issue presents two emblematic cases in the field of GMOs authorizations (Eliantonio and Lanceiro) and asylum policy (Vavoula) in the vertical and horizontal system of administrative cooperation for the implementation of EU law. Both contributions, albeit sector-specific, are used to draw some overarching conclusions on the challenges in the EU multi- and cross-level administrative framework.
This introduction, after presenting the state of the art on the questions tackled by this Special Issue and highlighting its contribution to existing literature on the topic, presents a number of observations aimed to bring together various trends emerging from the Articles contained in this Special Issue. It also explores avenues for further research and reflection.
B. The EU Multi- and Cross-Level Administrative Framework and its Challenges: The Extent of the Investigation so Far and the Open Questions
The cooperative mechanisms in the European administrative space have been labelled differentlyFootnote 2 and explored under various angles thus far. To date, commentators have examined various dimensions of the “integrated administration” in the EUFootnote 3 and proposed typologies of “composite procedures”Footnote 4 while identifying “accountability gaps” in EU governance.Footnote 5 Some works have explored composite procedures in specific policy fields,Footnote 6 or have discussed the role of European agencies in the system of integrated administration,Footnote 7 or the implications of the CJEU’s rulings where the legal questions linked to composite procedures have been tackled.Footnote 8
The global picture emerging is that of a regulatory paradigm that, while present since virtually the inception of the project of European integration, has not yet been fully and coherently explored and systematized. This Special Issue aims at further building on the earlier works on the system of administrative cooperation in the European Union from several perspectives.
First, this Special Issue addresses the extra-judicial, alongside the judicial, challenges in the EU multi- and cross-level administrative framework. While some studies have explored extra-judicial forms of control in the European multi-level administrative space,Footnote 9 there is certainly scope to explore further the emerging challenges, both from the point of view of the individual as well as from the point of view of institutional collaboration. To that end, the institutionsFootnote 10— European Ombudsman and the European Court of Auditors along with their national peers—that have been selected, represent traditional avenues of extra-judicial accountabilityFootnote 11 in the EU. Furthermore, one of the contributions, by Athanasiadou and Vogiatzis, seeks to identify similarities and, mostly, differences between the judicial and extra-judicial avenues of cooperation.
Second, two case studies are added to the fast-growing field of composite procedures: GMO authorizations and asylum. These case studies are representative in the field, as they exemplify procedures with a complex web of horizontal and vertical relationships between different national and EU actors, as well as the use of technological tools such as databases for the sharing of information.Footnote 12 In this context, this Special Issue aims to uncover, through these two case studies, possible general patterns in judicial challenges for the multi- and cross-level system of EU administrative cooperation.
Third, this Special Issue adds to the existing knowledge on composite procedures more generally, which so far has predominantly focused on multi- and cross-level decision-making procedures. This Special Issue adds the enforcement aspect to the analysis by examining the topic of shared inspection procedures, which has thus far not been subject to systematic investigation. This is an important contribution to our understanding of the challenges arising from administrative cooperation in the EU, because of the particular fundamental rights implications of those activities when they take place in a multi-level context.
Fourth, this Special Issue brings to the fore and explores the link between the notions of shared and transnational administration. While with the first term, reference is made to decision-making processes involving multiple jurisdictions participating at different moments and with different intensities, Footnote 13 the second term refers to the capacity of an administrative act to have effects outside the territory where the issuing authority is situated. While the two terms may overlap, in that composite procedures may culminate in the adoption of a transnational administrative act, this is not always and not necessarily the case. Furthermore, while the notion of transnational administrative acts has been developed in the context of the debate surrounding the system of mutual recognition,Footnote 14 this type of act may well arise beyond a paradigm of mutual recognition. Despite the capital importance in the system of European administrative integration, the notion of transnational administration has not been the subject of much analysis, especially in English, and studies have remained mostly theoretical.Footnote 15 This Special Issue aims to advance the conceptual understanding of the notion of transnational administration in the European Union; it seeks to disentangle the relationships between composite procedures and transnational administrative acts, on the one hand, and transnationality and mutual recognition, on the other hand, and discuss the challenges these mechanisms pose in terms of judicial protection.
C. This Special Issue in Further Detail: Key Issues and Common Themes
This Special Issue starts with the Article by Chevalier and Dubos on transnational administrative acts. These are acts that concern at least two national legal orders by reason of “the authority that adopted them, the scope of their effects, their addressee(s), and/or their decision-making process.”Footnote 16 A taxonomy of these acts is offered, on the basis of whether the act is with or without “transnational imputation” and with or without “transnational effects.”Footnote 17 Further, when examining the principles that determine the competent court, the key aim is to uncover challenges in the availability of judicial review in the aforementioned cases. Relying on the well-known principle of effective judicial protection, the authors claim that “the softness of the borders of administrative action requires the softening of those surrounding the system of judicial review.”Footnote 18
Arroyo Jiménez, in his contribution, focuses on a particular type of transnational administrative arrangement, namely the mechanism of mutual recognition—that is, “a regulatory arrangement under which the administrative or judicial authorities of one Member State must give legal effects within their territory to rules or acts passed by the legislative, administrative or judicial authorities of another Member State”Footnote 19—in the European administrative space. Again, the aim is to explore gaps in judicial protection or “judicial control blind spots arising in horizontal interactions.”Footnote 20 After an exposition of key principles surrounding the development, content, and context of effective judicial protection within the EU legal order, the different forms of mutual recognition are explored. The Article unravels the problems that may arise in judicial review regarding procedure, the law that must be applied, deference, and standards or review.
Lanceiro and Eliantonio then shift attention to include vertical cooperation as well. Their case study is the Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) regime, which is characterized as a “playground” for multi-level administration, yet a “nightmare” for effective judicial protection. The level of complexity is apparent after careful consideration of the two main legal instruments surrounding genetically modified food and feed under Regulation 1829/2003 and GMOs for uses other than food and feed, notably for cultivation or industrial uses under Directive 2001/18. They observe that common features in both procedures are a risk assessment by the European Food Safety Authority and “the presence of various moments to pre-empt political or judicial confrontation, and provide incentives for consensus.”Footnote 21 This, however, results in gaps in judicial protection, which the existing caselaw of the Court of Justice can only partially address.
Information sharing in the context of asylum policy is the focus of the next Article in the Special Issue, by Vavoula. Here, the focus is predominantly on horizontal cooperation, although the role of the European Data Protection Supervisor is briefly recalled. Vavoula argues that the applicable rules concerning Eurodac, “an EU-wide centralized information system which is aimed at assisting in the determination of the responsible Member State through the joint gathering of information,”Footnote 22 does not provide for sufficient and effective remedies for asylum seekers. Challenges for national courts include the difficulties in reviewing irregular registrations in Eurodac and transfers in breach of Article 34 of the Dublin III Regulation. In terms of extra-judicial remedies, recourse to national Data Protection Authorities (DPAs) is rarely used by individuals.
The next contribution adds the enforcement aspect to the picture: Shared inspection procedures is the focus of De Bellis’ Article. Beyond effective judicial protection, De Bellis focuses on the inviolability of the home, which is protected by both the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR) and the EU Charter. The Article draws primarily on the principles developed by the Strasbourg Court in its jurisprudence in order for inspections to be lawful, but, also, at places on the domestic experience of certain Member States. Applying these considerations in the EU legal order and reviewing the case-law of the Luxembourg Court, which has accepted that “the lack of ex ante judicial authorization can be counterbalanced through procedural guarantees and ex post judicial control,”Footnote 23 De Bellis concludes that the current remedies “fall short in providing a full ex post judicial scrutiny, in particular when these powers are used in the context of composite procedures.”Footnote 24
This Special Issue then considers more closely extra-judicial challenges, starting with ombud institutions and the cooperation between the European Ombudsman and her peers. The focus of Athanasiadou’s and Vogiatzis’ Article is on the “EU queries,”Footnote 25 a scheme that enables a national office to submit a query on EU law to the European Ombudsman and receive a reply. The origins and development of such cooperation, as well as an analysis of all of the queries published to date on the European Ombudsman’s website, “with a view to systemizing their subject matter and assessing the legal characteristics of the given responses,”Footnote 26 is provided. A comparison with the preliminary reference procedure underlines the differences, but also complementary function, and ultimately added value, thanks to its speed and flexibility, of the EU queries process in the effective and coherent application of EU law. Nonetheless, several challenges are also identified.
This Special Issue concludes with a contribution from Cipriani on the budgetary arrangements in the EU’s multilevel setting, with a particular focus on the role of the European Court of Auditors (ECA), which—despite its name—is another extra-judicial institution. As Cipriani explains, although the Commission formally assumes responsibility for the implementation of the budget, in practice this is implemented primarily by various domestic authorities. In this context, the role of the ECA in improving accountability is particularly challenging. It is claimed that a stronger focus on performance or “value for money” audit is required, and also that “the approach based on ‘error rates’ risks to promote wrong incentives and ineffective protection of taxpayers’ money.”Footnote 27 In addition, national audit offices could play a key role regarding the follow-up to recommendations addressed to Member States.
From the above brief presentation of the seven contributions to this Special Issue, it is possible to identify a number of common themes or concerns that emerge from some or most of the Articles. To begin with, clearly the principle of effective judicial protection arguably permeates the first five Articles of this Special Issue. Effective judicial protection features in Article 47 of the Charter and stems also from Articles 6 and 13 ECHR, but its development in the EU legal order well predates the Charter.Footnote 28 It is the imperative of effective judicial protection that prompts inquiries about the need to “soften the borders” in terms of review of transnational acts; to pay close attention to different forms of mutual recognition and the challenges of judicial review arising thereof; to consider the gaps in the review of procedures regarding GMOs, information sharing within the asylum system in the EU, or multi-level inspection activities.
Within the multi- and cross-level European administrative governance, there is indeed an inherent tension between the requirement of effective judicial protection, on the one hand, and the system of separation of jurisdiction and the principle of territoriality, on the other hand. The system of separation of jurisdiction—inspired by a strict adherence to the traditional doctrine of executive federalism—requires that the judicial authority competent for reviewing an administrative act be, in cooperative procedures between EU and Member State authorities, that of the system to which the act of the procedure belongs. The principle of territoriality, relevant in cooperative procedures between national authorities, is inspired by considerations of sovereignty and prevents a judicial instance from reviewing acts attributable to authorities of another sovereignly equal Member State. The Articles of this Special Issue show that, while procedural decision-making integration is a reality in virtually all EU policy fields, the default judicial disintegration might often be at odds with the requirement of effective judicial protection.
If this Special Issue is able to expand the discussion on the challenges arising on the basis of vertical cooperation via zooming in on selected areas, it also invites us to think carefully about horizontal cooperation as well, an area which has been less studied in the literature, and where the caselaw is possibly less mature than that with respect to vertical cooperation. Horizontal cooperation and the transnational nature of the acts and decisions that it generates is at the core of the contributions by Chevalier and Dubos; Arroyo Jiménez; and Vavoula. The limitations in the review of the “court of destination,” to refer to the terminology by Arroyo Jiménez, are apparent throughout these Articles. One example—among many others—offered by Arroyo Jiménez is the uncertainty about the interpretation of the law of origin that the court of destination might face. The possibility of several courts considering that they have jurisdiction to review an administrative act also entails a risk of contradictions in the assessment of the legality of an administrative act, as Chevalier and Dubos remind us.
Yet the discussion on extra-judicial challenges also brings to the fore the challenges arising from vertical cooperation. If instances of maladministration occur at the domestic level, and if the European Ombudsman’s remit does not extend therein, does this not impose a duty on the European and national ombud offices to find suitable forms of cooperation while respecting their respective remits? And if the ECA’s audit mandate is rather broad, does this not impose a duty on the ECA and the national audit offices to find appropriate ways of collaboration within the spirit of Article 287(3) TFEU?Footnote 29 The aforementioned Articles on maladministration and audit seek to reflect on these challenges as well.
If one could use a metaphor, a “cloud” surrounding some of these challenges is the question of trust. This path of enquiry certainly applies to the transnationality of administrative acts and the system of mutual recognition, but in this Special Issue it is exemplified in the contribution by Vavoula. Therein, Vavoula questions, among other things, the “presumption of trust” in the administrative practices of other Member States or indeed the tension between trust and effective judicial protection: “[T]he tension between trust in modern technologies and administrative procedures—fingerprint registration in Eurodac—taken place in other Member States, which may not be infallible, and the need to safeguard the fundamental rights of asylum seekers—particularly their right to an effective remedy.”Footnote 30 Elsewhere, further trust is perhaps being called for: Cipriani’s contribution underlines the limitations of the ECA’s resources and argues that follow-up to recommendations addressed to Member States could be undertaken by national audit offices. But Cipriani also claims that “broadening the geographical scope of the audit work would enhance the possibility of drawing conclusions beyond the current limited number of member states visited.”Footnote 31 The above observations entail that formidable legal doctrines can be established on trust, and excellent formulations may feature in the treaty or elsewhere, as is the case, for example, with Article 287(3) TFEU, but trust across Member States or between national and EU authorities is neither a given nor an impossibility: It requires careful consideration of the particular arrangements across policy fields, examination of domestic and EU jurisprudence, reports and other documents published by extra-judicial institutions, and, of course, consideration of empirical evidence.
Lastly, all of the Articles in this Special Issue, either briefly or more extensively, think about possible solutions to the problems that they have identified. A comprehensive picture can be found in the subsequent Articles, yet certain illustrative examples may be mentioned here. Chevalier and Dubos reflect on the ways and the extent of which a national court can review a foreign act on grounds of EU law. Arroyo Jiménez explores, in the mechanism of mutual recognition, opportunities emerging from the doctrines of Eurobolt Footnote 32 and Berlioz.Footnote 33 The potential of the latter judgment is also recognized by Lanceiro and Eliantonio, with a view to addressing certain of the gaps in judicial protection, as it enables a national court to review the lawfulness of acts taken by foreign authorities in order to comply with Article 47 of the Charter. Vavoula claims that a “more thorough” investigation is required by both domestic courts and national administrations, which could circumvent the presumption of trust and the limitations of judicial review. De Bellis calls for an action for annulment of the decision to inspect in areas where this is not possible and EU authorities do have inspection powers, while also inviting, in essence, the Luxembourg Court to pay closer attention to the jurisprudence of the Strasbourg Court. Athanasiadou and Vogiatzis argue that, in order to improve the transparency and effectiveness of the “EU queries” scheme, a “more formalized approach is needed,” in that the EU queries would “benefit from clearly delineating its features, outcome and added value vis-à-vis other instruments.”Footnote 34 Lastly, Cipriani advances a clearer focus on performance audit regarding the ECA’s work, further scrutiny across the ECA’s audit chambers’ thematic responsibilities, and more intensive cooperation with national offices regarding Member State compliance with its recommendations.
D. Avenues for Further Research and Reflection
The Articles in this Special Issue have sought to grapple with the challenges arising in the EU multi- and cross-level administrative framework. While administrative vertical and horizontal cooperation is an ever more prevalent feature of the European administrative space, the phenomenon still deserves further attention and scholarly analysis.
First, the relationship between separation of jurisdictions and the principle of territoriality, on the one hand, and the requirement of effective judicial protection, on the other hand, is far from settled. With incremental moves and somewhat ad hoc solutions, the Court of Justice has tried to move to a more “holistic” system of judicial review; however, the emerging picture is still in flux. In this respect, questions that would merit further exploration include the following: Will Berlioz find application beyond the field of mutual assistance in tax matters? Does Berlusconi not limit the review of the Court of Justice solely to illegalities arising from EU law, while leaving illegality stemming from the violation of national law in effect immune from judicial review? How can one imagine a “holistic” judicial review when composite procedures are at the same time both horizontal and vertical? How could and should the Court of Justice’s caselaw be of applications in procedures in which the input of the concerned actors is not formalized and can thus be hard to disentangle in the decision-making process? In this respect, it should be remembered that “jurisdictional boundaries” are still the default position, and the dilemmas that the Court is facing should be acknowledged.Footnote 35 One could even speak of challenges that the Court itself is facing when addressing judicial gaps that arise in the inevitable forms of vertical and horizontal cooperation in the EU.
Second, and linked to the first point, there is potential to explore where extra-judicial avenues of control might serve as alternatives to tackle the shortcomings of the judicial control mechanisms. To some extent, the exposition of the “EU queries” system in comparison with the preliminary reference already indicates the possible complementarity, if not the added value, of the extra-judicial avenue. Readers might be aware, of course, of some of the general advantages of extra-judicial avenues, which may include more relaxed or no locus standi requirements, reduced or no costs, flexibility, speed, a non-adversarial nature, and others. A widely used phrase of the second European Ombudsman was that there is “life beyond legality.”Footnote 36 And, indeed, one assumes that there may be some kind of trade-off between flexibility, understood in a broad sense to include the aforementioned elements, and legally binding decisions; one often cannot have both, and a careful consideration of the appropriate avenue would be required. Nevertheless, this Special Issue invites further reflection and investigation of such synergies, particularly in the field of composite procedures. De Bellis’ contribution identifies “judicial gaps” in inspections: With the aforementioned limitations under which an extra-judicial office, such as the European Ombudsman, operates, is there scope for the latter to provide some relief? One would note, in this respect, that the European Ombudsman’s mandate extends to “activities,” not “acts,” and that the office has already produced “ombuds-prudence” regarding OLAF, for example, that would certainly require further investigation.
In addition, the contribution by De Bellis, in particular, raises the interesting question as to whether further research might be needed so as to unravel points of convergence or divergence in terms of human rights jurisprudence of the two European courts. Of course, the evolving relationship between the Strasbourg and Luxembourg Courts has been thoroughly examined in the literature. Nevertheless, one wonders if in the field of composite procedures, in particular, there may be further opportunities for comparative investigation, including, but also going beyond, privacy and data protection.
Last, and beyond the question of judicial and non-judicial control of composite procedures, the patterns of cooperation in the EU multi- and cross-level administrative framework are certainly worthy of further exploration. Vavoula argues, for example, that “recourse to vertical cooperation seems a sensible solution” in light of the “forthcoming interoperability of EU information systems.”Footnote 37 Earlier research has shown that horizontal cooperation, often based on values of mutual trust and expressed in various patterns of mutual recognition, is being progressively eroded by centralizing tendencies in the EU regulatory framework. Footnote 38 Similarly, it has been shown that enforcement—traditionally the monopoly of national authorities—is increasingly placed within multi-levelFootnote 39 or purely European regulatory structures.Footnote 40 In this context, this Special Issue shows that there is certainly scope for a coherent study across policy or policies with a view to identifying how the various cooperative patterns—horizontal and vertical—have evolved, the reasons behind each institutional design, and the issues that remain unresolved.