Egmont Institute logo

The evolution of intergovernmental cooperation in the European process

Post thumbnail print

In

The Luxemburg report, also known as the Davignon report, adopted by Foreign Ministers in October 1970 is a generally accepted departure point for intergovernmental cooperation among members of the European Community. It was the first time that the “Community method”, devised by Jean Monnet and consolidated by the treaty of Rome on the basis of texts prepared by the Spaak Committee, was deliberately discarded, in the field of foreign policy, in favour of the traditional methods of diplomatic consultation, in an exercise initially known as “political cooperation”.

in Challenge Europe, the online magazine of the European Policy Center, 21 Nov. 2006.
(Photo credit: rockcohen, Flickr)