Montenegrin Capacity Building for Approximation
of EU Legislation
Supported by: SlovakAid, a Slovak
Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Programme
Study tour: "Scope and Competences
of Central State Authorities in the Frame of the Integration Process"
Period: March 24th -29th, 2013
Venue: Bratislava, Slovak
Republic
Interpretation: Slovak -
Montenegrin
The study tour "Scope and Competences of Central State Authorities
in the Framework of the Integration Process" took place in Bratislava,
Slovak Republic, on March 24-29, 2013. The study tour was organised within the
joint project of NISPAcee and HRMA (Human Resources Management
Authority), Montenegro.
The project is supported by SlovakAid, a Slovak Ministry of Foreign
Affairs' Programme.
For the study tour, 12 participants were selected, 9 of whom took part.
They represented various Montenegrin central state institutions, responsible
for preparing Montenegro for EU integration. The Montenegrin participants
represented both the legislative and executive parts of the state power and
came from the Montenegrin Parliament, Governmental Office, Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and European Integration, Ministry of Justice and HRMA. They
came to Slovakia with expectations of obtaining important information and
recommendations regarding organisational, technical and methodological support
of the accession process in the Slovak partner institutions and about the
possibility of their utilisation in Montenegro.
The study tour was divided into two main parts - study visits of the
relevant institutions and a seminar.
Within the study tour, the participants visited the National
Council of the Slovak Republic, Government Office of the Slovak Republic,
Ministry of Justice of the Slovak Republic, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
Slovak Republic and the Ministry of Environment of the Slovak Republic.
During the discussions in the various institutions, the Montenegrin
representatives were interested mainly in the following information:
- At what level of the legislative process is the harmony of the draft law
with the acquis communautaire considered?
- Which central state institution is responsible for the full harmonisation
of each draft law?
- The extent of the European sources of law which need to be translated
during the accession process.
- The manner in which the regulations are transposed, with direct effect,
into the law system of the associated state and what happened to these
transposed provisions after accession.
- The negotiations procedure during the accession period.
- The official and authorised electronic version of the Slovak Collection
of Laws.
- The system of denomination of the judges.
- The functions of Parliament, mainly the Committee for European Accession,
in the integration process.
- The governmental media campaign for ensuring a public pro-European
tendency.
- Slovak technical norms.
All
the information and facts obtained can be applied in the Montenegrin law system
and during the pre-accession period because Montenegro is at the beginning of
negotiations and there is still room to modify this process. Also, Montenegro
has to prepare its law system for all the constitutional changes resulting from
EU membership, so the information obtained also pointed out these obligations.
Study visit: Government Office of Slovak Republic
Study visit: Ministry of Justice of Slovak Republic
Study visit: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Slovak Republic
Study visit: National council of Slovak Republic
Study visit: National council of Slovak Republic
Study visit: National council of Slovak Republic
Study visit: National council of Slovak Republic
Study visit: Ministry of Environment
The seminar was opened by Ludmila Gajdosova, NISPAcee
Executive Director and Project Expert, Svetlana Vukovic, HRMA Director, and
Jana Oremova, Leading Project Expert. The main focus was on the
introduction of the set of 12 policy papers developed within the project by the
team of Slovak experts.
The Slovak Experts Jana Oremova, Boris Balog and Monika Michalova presented
the following policy papers:
- National constitution and its changes within the European Union.
- Preparation of the national implementation programmes related to the European
Union.
- Constitutional Court and its competencies within the European Union.
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs - its organisational structure and its
competencies within the European Union during the accession period.
- Governmental Office - its organisational structure and its competencies
within the European Union during the accession period.
- Special central state body for controlling the level of implementation
of the national law with the acquis – its structure and competencies.
- National Parliament - its organisational structure and its competencies
within the European Union during the accession period.
- The main relationship between the Government and Parliament within the
European Union.
- Approximation´s governmental decrees as the special source of law for
implementation of the acquis.
- The Statement of Compatibility and Tables of Concordance –
possibilities of how to ensure the compatibility of the legal sources within
the European Union.
- Regulatory impact assessment.
- Motivation of state employees during the accession period.
The topical areas of policy papers were identified by the Montenegrin
participants during the seminar in November 2012, based on the actual needs in
their country. All policy papers were presented during the study tour and
discussed among the experts and participants. Based on the discussions, the
expert team agreed the necessity to update and/or to amend some selected parts
within the next weeks in order to finalise the policy papers before the upcoming
conference (April 23, 2013).
During the seminar, a presentation was given on the role of the media and
third sector during the integration process in Slovakia. This topic was
additionally requested by the Montenegrin participants during the seminar in November,
2012 as it is also an actuality in their country.
The study tour
to the selected central state institutions, together with the aforementioned
presentation and discussion about the policy papers have given the participants
a compact scope of expert information about the pre-integration period in
Slovakia from the point of view of the division of constitutional competencies,
methods of approximation of law and practical experiences from the negotiation
process. The expert representatives of the institutions visited also gave the
Montenegrin delegation their personal experiences from this period and shared
with them important experiences arising from the negotiation process.
|