This book develops a timely critique of the complex trends emerging in
EU integration as it responds to the 'big issues' of our time. Repeated
economic crises, the climate emergency, digitalisation and geopolitical
turmoil are all having a profound societal and economic effect. The EU
Commission has been adding these 'big issues' as public interest
justifications for its competition policy and is adjusting existing
approaches and instruments accordingly. This is not without its
constitutional implications. Firstly, it impacts on the limits of EU
competition law in light of the Treaties. Secondly, it affects the
relationship between the relevant actors and the processes through which
EU competition law is implemented. This collection brings together EU
institutional and competition lawyers, to reflect on the constitutional
challenges and governance questions. The essays focus on the substantive
and procedural developments across the three main policy areas of EU
competition law: state aid, antitrust and merger control. Both EU
constitutional and competition lawyers will be interested in this
important new collection.