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The two years since publication of the first edition of The Law of
EU External Relations: Cases, Materials, and Commentary on the EU
as an International Actor have been characterized by the large
amount of case law on the new provisions on external relations,
which have found their way into the Lisbon Treaty. Moreover, there
have been important changes in EU secondary law on external
relations as a consequence of these changes to the Lisbon Treaty.
In this second edition, new case law and legislative developments
are critically discussed and analysed in this comprehensive
collection of EU Treaty law. Combining chapters on the general
basis of the Union's external action and its relation to
international law, with chapters which further explore the law and
practice of the EU in the specialized fields of external action,
this book presents the law of EU external relations in a concise
and accessible manner for students, practitioners, and academics in
the field. Topics include the common commercial policy, development
cooperation, cooperation with third countries, humanitarian aid,
the enlargement and neighbourhood policies, the external
environmental policy, and the common foreign and security policy.
Carefully selected primary documents are accompanied with analytic
commentary on the issues they raise and their significance for the
overall structure of EU external relations law. The primary
materials selected include many important legal documents that are
hard to find elsewhere but give a vital insight into the operation
of EU external relations law in practice.
From Treaty-Making to Treaty-Breaking is the first high-level
analysis of ASEAN's external trade agreements with non-ASEAN
states. It clearly sets out the intended, and unintended,
consequences of ASEAN's prevailing method of treaty making, with
suggested guidelines for the future. The book begins by asking
whether ASEAN trade agreements follow worldwide trends in the
substantive content of such agreements. It raises questions such
as: to what extent is it possible to continue concluding trade
agreements through individual member states?; what are the legal
consequences - from negotiation and conclusion (treaty-making)
through to possible breach of the agreements (treaty-breaking)?;
should ASEAN resort to mixed treaty-making? This study does not
seek to give a definitive answer to these questions, rather it
opens up the topic to readers by suggesting different possible
models for ASEAN trade agreements. This thought-provoking book will
appeal to anyone interested in trade negotiations and trade
agreements, particularly in Asia.
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