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E-raamat: Beyond the Established Legal Orders: Policy Interconnections between the EU and the Rest of the World [Hart e-raamatud]

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  • Formaat: 372 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Apr-2011
  • Kirjastus: Hart Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781847316462
  • Hart e-raamatud
  • Hind: 82,48 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Formaat: 372 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Apr-2011
  • Kirjastus: Hart Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781847316462
A lively debate on the constitutionalisation of the international legal order has emerged in recent years. A similar debate has also taken place within the European Union. This book complements that debate, exploring the underlying realities that the moves towards constitutionalism seek to address. It does this by focusing on the substantive interconnections that the EU has developed over the years with the rest of the world, and assesses the practical impact these have both in the development of its legal order as well as in the international community.





Based on papers delivered at the bi-annual EU/International Law Forum organised by the University of Bristol in March 2009, this collection of essays examines policy areas of economic governance (trade, financial services, migration, environment), political governance (human rights, criminal law, responses to financing terrorism), security governance (counter-terrorism, use of force, non-proliferation), and the issue of the emergence of European and global values. How are these areas shaped by the interaction between EU law and other legal orders and polities? In what ways does the EU impact on other transnational legal systems? And how are its own rules and principles shaped by such systems? These questions are addressed in the light of the specific legal and political context within which the EU pursues its policies by interacting with the rest of the world.
Summary Contents v
List of Contributors
xiii
Introduction 1(10)
PART ONE ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE
11(114)
1 Much More Than Trade: The Common Commercial Policy in a Global Context
13(34)
Joris Larik
I Introduction
13(4)
II The CCP as a Corollary of the Internal Market
17(6)
A The GATT compatibility of the internal market
17(2)
B Defending the internal market
19(2)
C Extending (parts of) the internal market
21(2)
III The CCP as a Vehicle for Foreign Policy
23(11)
A Ensuring the EU's trade benefits abroad
24(1)
B Shaping of foreign governance through trade
25(5)
C Reproducing the EU's own model through trade
30(4)
IV The CCP as Contributor to Constitutionalisation
34(11)
A The EU and the Uruguay Round
34(3)
B WTO law obligations and the Union legal order
37(3)
C The EU, the WTO and the multiplicity of `constitutional' claims
40(5)
V Conclusion
45(2)
2 Capital Market Openness After Financial Turmoil
47(34)
Eilis Ferran
I Introduction
47(2)
II Background: Where We Were
49(2)
III The Financial Crisis and the Immediate Aftermath
51(3)
IV Regulatory Strategies for Opening Up International Capital Markets
54(3)
V Mechanisms for the Development of Market-Opening Regulatory Strategies
57(5)
A International standard-setting
57(2)
B Bilateral regulatory dialogues: the transatlantic dialogue
59(2)
C Parallel avenues ...
61(1)
VI Accounting Standards
62(9)
A International Financial Reporting Standards
62(8)
B Equivalence: an alternative way forward
70(1)
VII International Mutual Recognition
71(9)
VIII Conclusions
80(1)
3 When is Migration not Migration? Examining Services in the EU and GATS
81(24)
Elspeth Guild
I Introduction
81(5)
II Service Provision Among the Member States and Third Country Nationals
86(4)
III Labour Migration and EU Service Provision
90(5)
IV Working Conditions and Posted Workers in the EU
95(2)
V GATS and the Worker/Personnel Division
97(6)
A The international community opens borders?
98(2)
B Migrants and GATS
100(3)
VI Conclusions
103(2)
4 Diplomacy by Directive? An Analysis of the International Context of the Emissions Trading Scheme Directive
105(20)
Hans Vedder
I A Tragedy of the Commons and Climate Change
105(3)
II The External Dimension of EU Environmental Policy
108(1)
III The Energy and Climate Package
109(6)
IV The External Dimension of the Emissions Trading Scheme Directive
115(7)
A Extraterritorial protective elements
115(2)
B Negotiation elements
117(3)
C Competitiveness elements
120(2)
V Conclusions: the Failure of Diplomacy by Directive
122(3)
PART TWO POLITICAL GOVERNANCE
125(78)
5 The EU and the International Legal Order: The Case of Human Rights
127(22)
Bruno De Witte
I Introduction
127(1)
II Judicial Interconnections: The European Court of Justice as a Human Rights Actor
128(7)
A Judicial reference to the European Convention on Human Rights
128(4)
B Judicial reference to other international instruments
132(3)
III Non-Judicial Interconnections: The Role of International Human Rights in the External and Internal Policies of the EU Institutions
135(11)
A The European Union as a party to international human rights treaties
135(3)
B Human rights policy in the pre-accession context
138(3)
C External human rights policy more generally
141(2)
D The EU Charter as a barrier to the domestic impact of international human rights instruments?
143(3)
IV Conclusion
146(3)
6 The European Union and the Rest of the World: Criminal Law and Policy Interconnections
149(30)
Valsamis Mitsilegas
I Introduction
149(1)
II The European Union and the United Nations
149(16)
A Interconnections in the field of money laundering law---the 1988 Vienna Convention and Community law
150(2)
B Interconnections in the field of the law on transnational organised crime---the 2000 Palermo Convention and Community/Union law
152(8)
C Interconnections in the field of the law of corruption: the 2003 Convention on Corruption and the EC/EU
160(5)
III The European Union and the Council of Europe
165(8)
A Interconnections in the field of judicial cooperation in criminal matters
166(1)
B Interconnections in the field of substantive criminal law
167(4)
C Interconnections in the field of the protection of fundamental rights in the criminal justice process
171(2)
IV The European Union and the Financial Action Task Force
173(5)
V Conclusion
178(1)
7 The Principle of Legality, Human Rights and the Management of Risks: Post-Kadi Reflections
179(24)
Takis Tridimas
I Introduction
179(1)
II The judgment in Kadi
180(3)
III Validity and Interpretation of Regulation No 881/2002
183(8)
A Issues of validity
183(2)
B Issues of interpretation
185(3)
C Sanctions against nuclear proliferation
188(3)
IV The UK Supreme Court and the Search for `Older, Nobler More Enduring Values'
191(10)
A The TO
192(2)
B The AQO
194(2)
C Assessment of the judgment
196(3)
D Influence of EU law
199(2)
V Conclusion
201(2)
PART THREE SECURITY GOVERNANCE
203(70)
8 Europe's Counter-terrorism Law(s): Outlines of a Critical Approach
205(20)
Jan Klabbers
I Introduction
205(1)
II The International Law on Terrorism
206(5)
III The European Strategy
211(6)
A Prevention
214(1)
B Protection
215(1)
C Pursue
215(1)
D Respond
216(1)
E Tensions within the strategy
216(1)
IV The Legal Instruments
217(6)
A The foreign policy dimension
217(2)
B The Union dimension
219(1)
C The justice dimension
220(3)
V Coherence
223(1)
VI Conclusion
224(1)
9 Reflections on European Effective Multilateralism and the Use of Force
225(24)
Per Cramer
I New Perceptions of Threat and Defence
225(2)
II The UN Framework
227(2)
III UN Crisis Management after the End of the Cold War
229(2)
IV The Question of Humanitarian Intervention
231(4)
V Effective Multilateralism---A Conditional European Loyalty to the UN System
235(3)
VI Concrete Cooperation Between the EU and the UN
238(3)
VII Potential Structural Effects of the Unions Conditional Loyalty to the United Nations
241(1)
VIII Potential Repercussions on the Multilateral Legal Order
242(2)
IX Conditional Loyalty as a Political Argument
244(1)
X Conditional Loyalty Formulated in the Judicial Arena
244(2)
XI Final Reflections
246(3)
10 The Non-proliferation Policy of the European Union
249(24)
Panos Koutrakos
I Introduction
249(1)
II Horizontal Principles Governing EU Non-proliferation Policy
250(13)
A Commitment to effective multilateralism
250(1)
1 Universalisation of relevant international treaties
251(1)
2 Reinforcement of the role of the United Nations
251(2)
3 Provision of financial and technical support for specific projects carried out in the context of international non-proliferation treaties aiming to enhance compliance
253(1)
4 Export controls
254(1)
(i) Armaments
254(2)
(ii) Dual-use goods
256(2)
5 Other measures
258(1)
B Broad construction of security
259(1)
C Cross-pillar
260(2)
D The Union's understanding of its own role
262(1)
III Vertical Principles Governing EU Non-proliferation Policy
263(6)
A Mainstreaming and the case of non-proliferation clauses
263(2)
B Proceduralisation and institutionalisation
265(1)
C The quest for coherence
266(3)
IV Inter-institutional Tensions and Judicialisation
269(3)
V Conclusion
272(1)
PART FOUR EUROPEAN AND GLOBAL INTEGRATION PROCESS
273(70)
11 Values in EU Foreign Policy
275(42)
Marise Cremona
I Introduction
275(3)
II Values, Principles and Objectives in the EU Treaties
278(3)
A Foundation values
278(1)
B Common values
279(1)
C Values, principles and objectives in the Treaty of Lisbon
280(1)
III Values and Identity
281(11)
A A condition of membership
281(2)
B Values as a source of Union law
283(2)
C Importing values and norms
285(6)
D The EU as a model for values
291(1)
IV Promoting Values
292(15)
A Promoting values via technical assistance
293(2)
B Promoting values via unilateral trade instruments
295(1)
C Promoting values via non-binding instruments
296(4)
D Shared values as a basis for developing a relationship
300(3)
E Shared values as an essential element of a contractual relationship
303(4)
V Building Values
307(6)
A Consensus-building
308(3)
B Decision-shaping and treaty-making
311(2)
VI Conclusion
313(4)
12 Principled Monism and the Normative Conception of Coercion under International Law
317(26)
George Pavlakos
Joost Pauwelyn
I Introduction
317(2)
II The Problem
319(6)
III Law's Force
325(5)
A A Kantian premise
326(1)
B The sparse connection thesis
327(2)
C The relevance of coercion
329(1)
IV Law's Sources
330(3)
A Institutions, morality and law's sources
331(2)
V Principled Monism in International Law
333(6)
A Two conceptions of international law
334(1)
1 The model of authority
335(1)
2 The model of reasons
336(3)
VI Concluding Remarks and Future Agenda
339(4)
Index 343
Panos Koutrakos is Professor of European Union Law and Jean Monnet Chair in European Law at the University of Bristol.

Malcolm Evans is Professor of Public International Law at the University of Bristol.