Term: Directive
What is a Directive?
Unlike a regulation, a directive is binding for member states only as to the result to be achieved, which means that it has to be transposed into national law.
Key Characteristics:
- Applicable to all Member States
- Sets aims, requirements and concrete results that must be achieved in every Member State
- Sets a process for it to be implemented by Member States
- National authorities must create or adapt their legislation to meet these aims by the date specified in each given Directive
- Each Member State is free to decide how they implement the Directive
Implementation Process:
- The EU issues a Directive with specific goals and deadlines
- Member States draft and pass national laws to achieve the Directive’s objectives
- Member States report these measures to the European Commission
- The Commission assesses whether the measures fully comply with the Directive
Regulation vs. Directive: Key Differences
Aspect | EU Directive | EU Regulation |
---|---|---|
Application | Requires national implementation | Directly applicable |
Flexibility | Allows for adaptation to national contexts | Uniform across all Member States |
Timeline | Implementation deadline set in the Directive | Immediately applicable upon entry into force |
National legislation | Requires new or amended national laws | May require complementary national legislation |
Enforcement | Enforced through national laws | Directly enforced as EU law |
Uniformity | May result in variations between Member States | Ensures uniform application across the EU |