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This handbook provides comprehensive and expert analysis of the
impact of the Brexit process and the withdrawal of the United
Kingdom from the European Union on existing and future EU-UK
relations within the context of both EU and international law.
Examining the wider international law implications, it additionally
assesses the complex legal consequences of Brexit for both the EU
and the UK in their dealings with third states and other
international organizations. With contributions from renowned
specialists in the field of EU external action, each chapter will
analyse specific policy areas to address key challenges arising
from the Brexit process for the EU and the UK and propose solutions
to overcome these problems. The handbook aims to fill a gap in
research by assessing the consequences of Brexit under EU external
relations law and international law. As such, it is hoped it will
set the research agenda for coming years on the international
dimension of Brexit. The Routledge Handbook on the International
Dimension of Brexit is an authoritative and essential reference
text for scholars and students of international and European/EU law
and policy, EU politics, and British Politics and Brexit, as well
as of key relevance to legal practitioners involved in Brexit,
governments, policy-makers, civil society organizations, think
tanks, practitioners, national parliaments and the Court of
Justice.
This handbook provides comprehensive and expert analysis of the
impact of the Brexit process and the withdrawal of the United
Kingdom from the European Union on existing and future EU-UK
relations within the context of both EU and international law.
Examining the wider international law implications, it additionally
assesses the complex legal consequences of Brexit for both the EU
and the UK in their dealings with third states and other
international organizations. With contributions from renowned
specialists in the field of EU external action, each chapter will
analyse specific policy areas to address key challenges arising
from the Brexit process for the EU and the UK and propose solutions
to overcome these problems. The handbook aims to fill a gap in
research by assessing the consequences of Brexit under EU external
relations law and international law. As such, it is hoped it will
set the research agenda for coming years on the international
dimension of Brexit. The Routledge Handbook on the International
Dimension of Brexit is an authoritative and essential reference
text for scholars and students of international and European/EU law
and policy, EU politics, and British Politics and Brexit, as well
as of key relevance to legal practitioners involved in Brexit,
governments, policy-makers, civil society organizations, think
tanks, practitioners, national parliaments and the Court of
Justice.
This discerning book examines EU migration and asylum polices in
times of crisis by assessing old and new patterns of cooperation in
EU migration management policies in the scope of third-country
cooperation. The case studies explored reveal that there has been a
clear tendency and strategy to move away from or go outside the
decision making rules and institutional principles enshrined in the
Lisbon Treaty to advance third country cooperation on migration
management. It explores the implications of and effects of the
adoption of extra-Treaty instruments and patterns of cooperation in
the light of EU rule of law and fundamental rights principles and
standards. The book, examines the ways in which the politics of
migration crisis and their patterns of cooperation and legal/policy
outcomes evidenced since 2015 affect and might even undermine EU's
legitimacy in these policy areas. Constitutionalising the External
Dimensions of EU Migration Policies in Times of Crisis will be a
key resource for academics and students focussing on EU Law and
migration more specifically. Timely and engaging, it will also
appeal to policy- makers, legal practitioners and international
organisation representatives alike.
Since the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon, key
improvements have occurred in the democratisation of EU
international relations through the increased powers of the
European Parliament. Nevertheless, a comprehensive legal analysis
of the new developments in democratic control of EU external action
has not yet been performed. This book aims to improve the
understanding of the set of mechanisms through which democratic
control is exerted over EU external action, in times of profound
transformations of the legal and political architecture of the
European integration process. It analyses the role of the Court of
Justice in the democratisation of international relations through
EU law, and further provides a legal overview of the role of the
European Parliament in the conduct of the EU's international
relations. In those areas where the powers of the Parliament have
greatly increased the book aims to raise questions as to whether
this enhanced position has contributed to a more consistent
external action. At the same time, the book aims to contribute to
the debate on judicial activism in connection with the
democratisation of EU external action. It offers the reader a
detailed and topical analysis of the recent developments in
democratic control of external action which are of relevance in the
daily practice of EU external relations lawyers, including the
topic of mixed agreements This text will be of key interest to
scholars and students working on EU external relations law, EU
institutional law, European Union studies/politics, international
relations, and more broadly to policy-makers and practitioners,
particularly to those with an interest on the European Parliament
and the Court of Justice of the European Union.
Since the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon, key
improvements have occurred in the democratisation of EU
international relations through the increased powers of the
European Parliament. Nevertheless, a comprehensive legal analysis
of the new developments in democratic control of EU external action
has not yet been performed. This book aims to improve the
understanding of the set of mechanisms through which democratic
control is exerted over EU external action, in times of profound
transformations of the legal and political architecture of the
European integration process. It analyses the role of the Court of
Justice in the democratisation of international relations through
EU law, and further provides a legal overview of the role of the
European Parliament in the conduct of the EU's international
relations. In those areas where the powers of the Parliament have
greatly increased the book aims to raise questions as to whether
this enhanced position has contributed to a more consistent
external action. At the same time, the book aims to contribute to
the debate on judicial activism in connection with the
democratisation of EU external action. It offers the reader a
detailed and topical analysis of the recent developments in
democratic control of external action which are of relevance in the
daily practice of EU external relations lawyers, including the
topic of mixed agreements This text will be of key interest to
scholars and students working on EU external relations law, EU
institutional law, European Union studies/politics, international
relations, and more broadly to policy-makers and practitioners,
particularly to those with an interest on the European Parliament
and the Court of Justice of the European Union.
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