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Illustrating the legacy of Brexit, this timely Research Handbook
provides a comprehensive and coherent analysis of not only the
Brexit process within the UK but also what it means for both the UK
and the EU within the framework of their future relationship.
Bringing together contributions from leading scholars in the field,
this Research Handbook considers the ways in which the legal,
economic and political uncertainty brought about by Brexit through
the upheaval of established norms and values will continue to
reverberate for the remainder of the 2020s and beyond. Divided into
four parts, it focuses on different aspects of the Brexit process
and the EU-UK future relationship, including Brexit's impact on the
political system of the United Kingdom, repatriation of laws and
competences and a post-Brexit framework. Above all, it argues that
Brexit creates both new challenges and new opportunities for the UK
but also for the process of EU integration. The Research Handbook
on Legal Aspects of Brexit will be crucial reading for researchers
and students in the fields of constitutional and administrative
law, European law and politics looking to enhance their
understanding of the impact that Brexit will have for both the UK
and the EU.
This accessible and detailed book takes an interdisciplinary
approach in exploring the position of national parliaments in the
EU polity and in particular their position within the EU governance
framework. Adam Cygan analyzes the impact of subsidiarity
monitoring upon national parliaments and to what extent this
provides new opportunities for national parliaments to be engaged
in, and exert influence over, the EU legislative process. While the
post-Lisbon position of national parliaments may have improved,
this book questions whether national parliaments can really be
considered as central actors in EU affairs. The author also queries
whether subsidiarity monitoring has the capacity to create a
collective bloc of horizontal actors which exert effective
accountability over the EU legislative process. Accountability,
Parliamentarism and Transparency in the EU will strongly appeal to
academics, parliamentarians/parliamentary officials working in EU
affairs, as well as EU civil servants. Contents: Introduction 1.
National Parliaments, Accountability and Transparency in a European
Perspective 2. European Integration and Deparliamentarisation 3.
National Parliaments in the EU Treaties 4. The Ordinary Legislative
Process and National Parliaments 5. Subsidiarity as a Regulatory
Principle in EU Law 6. Subsidiarity Control after Lisbon 7.
Accountability and Legitimacy in a Multi-Level Context 8. National
Parliaments after Lisbon: A New Dawn of Accountability or Remaining
on the Periphery? Bibliography Index
The purpose of this book is to examine, from an EU perspective, the
numerous developments which have taken place in the regulation of
sporting activity in the last decade. Uniquely, in addressing these
developments, the book adopts an inter-disciplinary approach,
involving law, economics and sociology. The chapters place the
regulation of sport in the context of the EU regulatory structure
which hitherto has emerged in a piece-meal fashion and thus
warrants a more holistic approach. The chapters bring together
several key themes which arise from the question of whether sport
is special? This addresses a growing argument that sporting
activity displays unique properties which require a distinct form
of regulation that existing competition or free movement rules
cannot provide. The book is divided into three parts which reflect
the current policy, legislative and judicial discourses that exists
in the regulation of sport. The Regulation of Sport in the European
Union provides both an academic and practical review of EU law and
policy as applied to sport, and as such, this comprehensive
overview will be of great interest to EU law academics, economists
and political scientists. It will also appeal to legal
practitioners and to those with an interest in regulatory processes
in the EU.
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