Governmental powers can be apportioned vertically at different levels.
Five levels of vertical government are distinguishable, moving from
purely local to the truly global: (1) local, ie municipal or citywide;
(2) substate-regional (3) State; (4) supranational, eg the European
Union; (5) and arguably global eg the WTO and the UN. This book focuses
on levels (2) (3) and (4). It intends to analyse the interaction of the
constitutional and political orders of EU Member States that exhibit
varying degrees of territorial pluralism, their sub-state entities and
the supranational organisation to which they belong. It does so by
comparing the division of competences for internal policies but also for
external affairs, the various models of fiscal federalism and the
different systems for the effective protection of individual and
collective rights within various European multi-level constitutional
orders. Following a functional method of comparative constitutional law,
on which the ERC-funded European and National Constitutional law project
is based, the current book provides for an important study of the
application of the federal principle within the European constitutional
space.