Refresh

0 Hits

Pernice | Guerra Martins

Brexit and the Future of EU Politics

A Constitutional Law Perspective
Nomos,  2019, 278 Pages

ISBN 978-3-8487-6208-8


Our continuation service: You will receive new series titles or new editions automatically and without obligation to purchase. If you wish to do so, you can mark it in the shopping cart.

The work is part of the series European Constitutional Law Network-Series (Volume 10)
74,00 € incl. VAT
Also available as eBook
0,00 € free of charge
Available
Add to shopping cart
Add to notepad
 Further options for registered users

englischAs the end of the Brexit process is still not in sight, the consequences of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU—with or without an agreement—are difficult to assess. This volume aims at an interim assessment of Brexit, from basic questions of sovereignty, which Brexiteers seem to be striving to recover, models of differentiated integration and the protection of fundamental rights, to the principle of democracy, which seems to be being challenged in different ways. How has the internal market been affected by Brexit? How have citizens’ social rights as developed by the ECJ been affected? What impact has Brexit had on the control of immigration in the UK? All this is dealt with in part II of this anthology. Its last part is devoted to monetary and financial policies, as well as to the Common Foreign and Security Policy, a policy that is only subject to supranational discipline in part and in which the UK, nevertheless, plays an important role—and may continue to do so in the future. A great deal looks different today than one may have expected prior to the 2016 referendum.

With contributions by

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.

Find reading samples of the current title in PDF format here: