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2 Eur. L. Open 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/eurlwop2 and id is 1 raw text is: 


European Law Open (2023), 2, 1-7                                      CAMBRIDGE
doi:10.1017 e1o.2023.22                                               LNIVE     PRESS       L







Marco  Dani
University of Trento, Trento, Italy
Email: marco.dani@unitn.it



Experimented   in the interwar period' and established in the aftermath of World  War  II, activist
government consolidated in Europe as a successful form of political rule during les trente
gloriouses,2 owing to its commitment   to industrial modernisation, macroeconomic stabilisation
and  redistribution.3 Both the success and the decline of that idea are entwined with the process
of European integration. If activist   government could evolve and spread in the first two
decades  after World   War   II, it was due  in no  small part  to the enabling  capacity  of the
European   Economic   Communities.4 Likewise, if   it was discredited and  weakened   as from the
late 1970s, much  of the blame  can be attributed to the constraining capacity of the EU  treaties
and  their predisposition  to tame  state activism.' Especially  after the Treaty  of Maastricht,
activist government   came  to be  seen as a thing  of the past destined  to be gradually  scaled
down   and  replaced with  the regulatory  state,6 a new  form  of political rule definitely more
attuned  to the  predominant   neoliberal  Zeitgeist. Its fortunes were ever  more  on  the wane
during  the Euro-crisis, when  the combination   of EU muddling-through and austerity policies
seemed   to put  an  end  to that once  venerable  idea  and  its promise  of economic   security
and  emancipation.   And   yet with  the COVID-19 pandemic, activist government made an
unexpected   return:  the need  to finance  health  care systems,  to shore  up  large sectors of
national  economies and to sustain workers during lock-downs required massive state
interventions  and favoured  the rediscovery of tools and policies that until recently had seemed
obsolete.
   Again, even in this revival of state activism EU institutions were deeply involved. In the context
framed  by  the EU  treaties, most state interventions would not have  been  possible without the
imprimatur   or active contribution of the Union. Indeed, state interventionism was unleashed  by






  'Activist policies came to the fore with particular intensity after the financial crash of 1929, and were not the preserve of
liberal and democratic regimes, as Fascism, Nazism and, of course, the Soviet Union were all deeply involved in the
experiment. However, especially after World War II, the Weimar and New Deal experiences were seen as forerunners, see
M  Goldmann and AJ Menendez, 'Weimar Moments: Transformations of the Democratic, Social, and Open State of Law'
(2022) Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law & International Law Research Paper No 2022-12, and KK Patel, The
New Deal: A Global History (Princeton University Press 2016).
  2J Fourasti&, Les Trente Glorieuses ou la revolution invisible (Hachette 2004).
  3G Majone, 'From the Positive to the Regulatory State: Causes and Consequences of Changes in the Mode of Governance'
17 (1997) Journal of Public Policy, 139-167.
  4A Milward, The European Rescue of the Nation-State (Routledge 2000).
  SA Mody, Euro Tragedy. A Drama in Nine Acts (Oxford University Press 2018).
  6Majone (n 3).
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bv/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction,
provided the original article is properly cited.

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