Confronting Rule Adoption and Implementation in Montenegro’s Europeanization

Autores/as

Edina Paleviq
Andrássy University Budapest

Sinopsis

Montenegro is a frontrunner in the EU accession process, and yet it is stagnating and even backsliding in terms of democracy and the rule of law. A question arising is whether the EU’s conditionality―under its new methodology, known as the “new approach”―regulating the EU accession process effectively strengthens democratic institutions there. This chapter argues that so far this approach has not worked successfully in Montenegro beyond the norm adoption phase for three main reasons: a lack of clarity about EU conditionality, the presence of long-ruling elites, and a specific national political culture. Through Europeanization theories, this research tests two areas in rule of law promotion: judiciary reform and freedom of the press. Based on a normative approach, the content of rules and laws in the judicial sector and freedom of expression are studied to challenge the EU’s external demands (rule adoption) empirically, by discussing the regular obstacles mentioned in the media and in reports by non-governmental organizations (implementation). In particular, the political and social context in which these dynamics operate is emphasized. Conclusions show that, while EU conditionality has brought an undeniably positive change in Montenegro and has successfully led to the adoption of new laws, implementing democratic institutions remains arduous since political elites overshadow integration. At the same time, checks and balances have eroded in the face of unpunished abuse of power. The study speaks to debates on Europeanization and ways to strengthen the rule of law along with EU standards in candidate member states and provides useful solutions to the failures of EU conditionality.

Biografía del autor/a

Edina Paleviq, Andrássy University Budapest

Edina Paleviq is a political scientist specializing in European integration and nationalism in the Western Balkans. She earned her PhD from Andrássy University Budapest, where her research examined the role of Montenegrin civil society in the EU accession process. Her broader academic interests include Europeanization, bottom-up democratization, and the dynamics of ethnicity and nationalism in Southeastern Europe. She has published widely in peer-reviewed journals and edited volumes, and she currently serves as an editorial committee member for Global Europe Journal.

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Publicado

diciembre 11, 2025

Licencia

Creative Commons License

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0.

Cómo citar

Confronting Rule Adoption and Implementation in Montenegro’s Europeanization. (2025). In Decentering European studies: perspectives on Europe from its beyond (pp. 67-85). Laboratorio Editorial. https://doi.org/10.36311/2025.978-65-5954-652-7.p67-85