Cover of book: Brexit and the Future of EU Politics
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Brexit and the Future of EU Politics

A Constitutional Law Perspective
Editors:
Publisher:
 2019

Summary

So wie das Ende des Brexit-Prozesses weiterhin nicht absehbar bleibt, sind die Folgen des Austritts des UK aus der EU – mit oder ohne Abkommen – kaum abzumessen. Dieser Band versucht eine Zwischenbilanz, von Grundfragen zur Souveränität, um deren Wiedergewinnung es den Brexitern zu gehen scheint, über Modelle differenzierter Integration und den Grundrechtsschutz bis hin zur Demokratie, die in mancherlei Weise auf die Probe gestellt wird. Wie ist der Binnenmarkt betroffen, wie die vom EuGH vielleicht zu weitgehend etablierten sozialen Rechte, wie die Kontrolle der Einwanderung in das UK? – Dem ist Teil II des Sammelbandes gewidmet. Der letzte Teil betrifft mit der Währungs- und Finanzpolitik sowie der Gemeinsamen Außen- und Sicherheitspolitik Bereiche, die nur begrenzt der supranationalen Disziplin unterliegen und wo das UK gleichwohl eine wichtige Rolle spielt und auch künftig spielen könnte. Vieles stellt sich heute anders dar, als man vor dem Referendum von 2016 erwartet hätte.

Mit Beiträgen von

Giacinto della Cananea, Tom Eijsbouts, Paula Vaz Freire, Rui Lanceiro, Jean-Victor Louis, Stefan Griller, Ana Maria Guerra Martins, Maria José Rangel de Mesquita, Ingolf Pernice, Daniel Thym, Mattias Wendel, Jiøí Zemánek.

Keywords



Bibliographic data

Edition
1/2019
Copyright Year
2019
ISBN-Print
978-3-8487-6208-8
ISBN-Online
978-3-7489-0324-6
Publisher
Nomos, Baden-Baden
Series
European Constitutional Law Network-Series
Volume
10
Language
English
Pages
278
Product Type
Edited Book

Table of contents

ChapterPages
  1. Titelei/InhaltsverzeichnisPages 1 - 4 Download chapter (PDF)
  2. IntroductionPages 5 - 14 Download chapter (PDF)
    1. Authors:
      Download chapter (PDF)
      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. Introduction. Article 50 TEU
        Authors:
      3. Brexit: a miscarriage of democracy
        Authors:
      4. Sovereignty in general and in the context of EU
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      5. Sovereignty as a notion: more than legal
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      6. Creation of the Euro-summit and its permanent chair, Brussels, 25 March 2010
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      7. Conclusion: suggestions for reading sovereignty and the EU constitution
        Authors:
    2. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. 1 A Challenging and Inspiring Contribution but…
        Authors:
      3. Authors:
        1. 2.1 Inseparable link between sovereignty and State
          Authors:
        2. 2.2 The EU’s challenges to the idea of sovereignty
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        3. 2.3 The EU Sovereignty Idea May Cause More Damages than Gains
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        4. 2.4 Other difficulties Raised by the Extension of the Concept of Sovereignty
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      4. Authors:
        1. 3.1 The evolution of EMU Governance denies the EU Sovereignty
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        2. 3.2 The reversibility of the UK decision of leaving the EU
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      5. 4 The Role of Sovereignty within the Negotiations of Brexit
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      6. 5 May EU Sovereignty emerge after Brexit?
        Authors:
    3. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. I. Introduction
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      3. Authors:
        1. A. A Union of Peoples
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        2. B. A Community of Destiny
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        3. C. A Unitary Institutional Framework
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        4. D. Flexibility Within Unity
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        5. E. The Difficulties of this Vision of Europe
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      4. Authors:
        1. A. A Broad Community of Nation-States
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        2. B. A ‘Community of Interests’
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        3. C. The Shift from Principles to ‘Values’
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        4. D. From Transitional to Permanent Differences
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        5. E. The Difficulties of this Vision of Europe
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      5. Authors:
        1. A. Clarity and Coherence
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        2. B. No ‘Ever Closer’ Monetary Integration within the EMU
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        3. C. Enhanced Cooperation: Nature, Rationale and Impact
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        4. D. ‘Internal’ International Agreements: the Fiscal Compact
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        5. E. Two-speed Europe: Concept and Issues
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        6. F. A Synthesis
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      6. Authors:
        1. A. A Single Market Beyond the Union: the European Economic Area
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        2. B. Schengen’s Mixed Membership
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        3. C. A Europe of Concentric Circles: a ‘Misleading Simple Idea’
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        4. E. Implications for the post-Brexit Scenario
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      7. VI. Conclusion
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    4. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. I. Introduction
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      3. II. The position of the EU charter in United Kingdom
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      4. III. The relevance of the CFR for the areas of EU policies
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      5. IV. Recent developments
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      6. V. Conclusions
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    5. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. Introduction
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      3. Authors:
        1. A. The Cameron Strategy was democratic
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        2. B. Advisory Referendum and Democracy
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        3. C. The Terms of Article 50 TEU as an Expression of Democracy
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        4. D. Stimulating democratic Processes in the EU
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      4. Authors:
        1. Authors:
          1. 1. Decisions with no Voice for those affected
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          2. 2. The Principle of loyal Cooperation as a negotiation Guideline
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          3. 3. Exclusion of Nationals in other Member States from the Vote
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          4. 4. The European Parliament and the Union Citizens’ Rights
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          5. 5. Protection of acquired Rights by the Countries of Residence?
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        2. Authors:
          1. 1. Parliamentary Democracy and Systemic Lying: Trust and Distrust
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          2. 2. Direct Democracy: the Risks of irreversible Decisions
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        3. C. ‘Advisory’ Referendum?
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        4. D. Courts and Democracy
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      5. Authors:
        1. A. Lies have short Legs.
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        2. B. Dynamics of Democracy: What if Brexit loses Support?
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        3. C. Growing Awareness of the Externalities of national Politics
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        4. D. People and Citizens of Member States acting as Citizens of the EU
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      6. Conclusion
        Authors:
    1. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. I. Internal Market and the UK
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      3. II. Economic Impacts of Brexit
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      4. III. Legal Framework for UK’S ‘Access to the EU Single Market’
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      5. IV. Financial Contribution
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      6. Conclusive Remarks
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    2. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. I. Introduction: the current debate on non-national EU citizens social rights in a host State
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      3. II. The Recent Evolution in CJEU Case-law on Access to Social Assistance Granted to Non-national EU Citizens
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      4. III. The evolution of the case-law: the UK child benefit or child tax credit case
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      5. IV. The evolution of the case-law after the UK child benefit or child tax credit case
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      6. V. Critical Analysis
        Authors:
    3. Authors:
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      1. I. Introduction
        Authors:
      2. Authors:
        1. A. Status Quo: Extended Opt-out
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        2. B. Brexit: Loss of the Opt-in Option
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        3. C. The Future: Reversed Dynamics
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      3. Authors:
        1. A. Immigration and Border Controls
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        2. B. Customs Controls and the so-called “Backstop”
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      4. Authors:
        1. A. Securing Citizens’ Rights
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        2. B. Intra-European Mobility and Immigration After Brexit
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      5. V. Conclusion
        Authors:
    1. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. I. Introduction
        Authors:
      3. II. The more straightforward institutional consequences of the Brexit in monetary and financial matters
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      4. III. The unchanged situation of both the UK, EU and national authorities in the international financial institutions and a future cooperation
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      5. IV. The economic and social consequences for the UK
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      6. V. The impact on the continental financial markets
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      7. VI. Some short conclusive remarks
        Authors:
    2. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. Introductory Remarks
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      3. I. On the Dynamics of EMU-participation and EMU-reform
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      4. II. On the Importance of Commercial Presence on 31 October 2019
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      5. III. On the Systemic Importance of Clearing Houses
        Authors:
    3. Authors:
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      1. Abstract
        Authors:
      2. Authors:
        1. A. The wider context: EU External Action and CFSP and CSDP within the CFSP
          Authors:
        2. B. The Global Strategy for the EU’s Foreign and Security Policy and follow-up: trends on the EU side
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      3. Authors:
        1. A. The EU Perspective
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        2. B. The UK perspective
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      4. Authors:
        1. A. The Agreement on the Withdrawal and the Common Foreign and Security Policy
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        2. B. The Political Declaration and Foreign Policy, security and defence
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      5. Authors:
        1. A. Common grounds as a basis of the future EU-UK relationship
          Authors:
        2. B. Possible issues and forms of cooperation to be addressed
          Authors:
  3. List of Authors:Pages 277 - 278 Download chapter (PDF)

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