Distinct body of the European Union
The European Union and Euratom have agencies, decentralised independent bodies, corporate bodies and joint undertakings which are established as juridical persons through secondary EU legislation and tasked with a specific narrow field of work.[ 1] They are a part of the wider set of bodies of the European Union and Euratom and are therefore distinct from:
international law juridical persons established through primary (treaty) legislation, either as an EU institution (the European Central Bank ) or as an EU body of another type (such as the European Investment Bank Group entities, the European University Institute , the European Stability Mechanism or the Unified Patent Court )
other EU institutions
other EU bodies lacking juridical personality , including the advisory bodies , the independent offices held by a single person (European Ombudsman , European Data Protection Supervisor ), and the (non-independent, auxiliary) EU inter-institutional services, regardless of whether established through treaty or through secondary legislation
the pan-EU organisational forms which are not considered constituent bodies of the EU or Euratom, regardless of whether possessing juridical personality (European Research Infrastructure Consortium , European political party , European political foundation , European grouping of territorial cooperation , Societas Europaea , Societas Cooperativa Europaea ) or lacking it (European economic interest grouping )