The Evolving Nature of EU External Relations Law
| 企业作者: | |
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| 其他作者: | , , , , , |
| 总结: | XIV, 378 p. 4 illus. text |
| 语言: | 英语 |
| 出版: |
The Hague :
T.M.C. Asser Press : Imprint: T.M.C. Asser Press,
2021.
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| 版: | 1st ed. 2021. |
| 主题: | |
| 在线阅读: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6265-423-5 |
| 格式: | 电子 电子书 |
书本目录:
- Part I. The EU as Exporter of Rules and Standards
- Chapter 1. The Value of the EU International Values
- Chapter 2. New Approaches in the Promotion of EU Standards
- Chapter 3. Shaping EU External Relations Beyond Treaty-Making: The Scope of Extraterritorial EU Legislation and Its Enforcement Challenges
- Chapter 4. CETA: Gold Standard or Greenwashing?
- Part II. The EU, Treaty-making, and Foreign Policy
- Chapter 5. The CJEU and the Potential and Limitations of Systemic Integration
- Chapter 6. Provisional Application’s Novel Rationale: Facilitating Mixity in the EU’s Treaty Practice
- Chapter 7. PESCO’s Microcosm of Differentiated Integration
- Chapter 8. The Participation of Members and Non-Members in EU Foreign, Security and Defence Policy
- Part III. The EU and Third European Countries
- Chapter 9. The Building Blocks and Stumbling Stones of Constructing the European Legal Space
- Chapter 10. Where Do We Go from Here? EU Relations with the Eastern Partnership Avant Garde
- Chapter 11. Legal Status of the United Kingdom as a Third State: Strange Déjá Vu
- Chapter 12. Brexit and the ‘Great British Trade-off’: The Future of the EU’s and the UK’s External Treaty Relations
- Part IV. The EU and Migration Policies
- Chapter 13. One Year after the Adoption of the Global Compact for Migration: Some Thoughts on the Role Played by the EU
- Chapter 14. The Externalisation of EU Migration Policies: The Implications Arising from the Transfer of Responsibilities to Third Countries
- Chapter 15. The EU’s Policy Towards Combatting Trafficking in Human Beings in Its Relations with the Eastern Neighbourhood: A Human Rights-Based Approach?
- Chapter 16. EU Cooperation with Third Countries on Migration and Asylum: The Case of Libya Revisited.