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European Union Law and Defence Integration (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R4,010
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European Union Law and Defence Integration (Hardcover, New)
Series: Modern Studies in European Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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This monograph examines the legal dimension of European defence
integration from the Second World War to the Treaty Establishing a
Constitution for Europe. It covers the evolution of European
defence and security law in its legal,historical, and political
context. The notion of defence law describes the entire field of
rules created to regulate the defence of a nation or alliance. The
analysis leads from the earliest mutual defence treaties to the
failure of the European Defence Community and the eventual
separation of defence from the mainstream of European integration
in the 1950s, further to the re-vitalisation of a European security
policy in the Treaties of Maastricht, Amsterdam, and Nice. In the
context of this evolutionary process, the book examines the
function of Community Law as an instrument of European defence
integration. Community law affects the economic and social aspects
of the defence within the limits of the security exemptions of the
EC Treaty. It has an impact on the composition of the armed forces,
the procurement of armaments, or the regulation of the defence
industries. The book concludes with an analysis of the Common
Security and Defence Policy of the Constitutional Treaty agreed by
the European Council in 2004. The discussion shows that European
defence integration is characterised by fragmentation in an area
where coherence is particularly important. First, defence and
security are addressed in several organisations: the EU, the
Western European Union, NATO, the Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, and the Organisation for Joint Armaments
Cooperation. Second, defence and security are addressed in both the
supranational Community Pillar and the intergovernmental Second
Pillar of the Treaty on European Union. The new Constitutional
Treaty aims to overcome the three-Pillar structure of the Union.
Nevertheless, it leaves the intergovernmental character of the
security and defence policy intact and introduces flexible
frameworks for its mutual defence, crisis management, and armaments
components. However, the Union needs a coherent defence policy to
ensure her security and to speak with one voice on the
international scene.
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