In 2004, women candidates won a relatively high share of Slovenian seats in the European Parliament thanks to effective institutional engineering.
In 2004, women candidates won a relatively high share of Slovenian seats in the European Parliament thanks to effective institutional engineering.
Slovenian drug policy reflects several key features of Central and Eastern European welfare systems.
The article analyses the usual one-dimensional simplification of a complex socio-political reality, conventionally identified in Central and Eastern European post-communist countries as a left-right continuum.
The Treaty of Lisbon, in Article 12, mentions for the first time at treaty level the role of national parliaments (OJ C 306, 207), underlining the dynamics of strengthening the parliamentary dimension in the European Union (EU), which also applies to some extent to the Slovenian Presidency.