The Conclusion and Implementation of Eu Free Trade Agreements Constitutional Challenges

Enter your mobile phone number or email address below and we`ll send you a link to download the free Kindle app. Then you can read Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet or computer – no Kindle device required. The EU is trustworthy only any of its members. This may be the conclusion reached by some of the EU`s trading partners in recent years, as the final ratification of EU trade agreements has been subject to resistance from a single Member State. The EU`s credibility and effectiveness in its external trade relations may depend on its ability to conclude treaties on behalf of the Union as a whole. However, the EU`s internal constitutional structure does not yet allow for a perfect adaptation to the practices of modern trade and investment agreements. This is the key question examined in the volume edited by Isabelle Bosse-Platière and Cécile Rapoport. The volume is an impressive collection of well-researched chapters that focus on the conclusion of free trade agreements by the EU on the one hand and on the implementation of these agreements on the other. The division makes sense, as both areas have their own legal and practical peculiarities. The first part begins by dealing with legal issues arising from the recent case law of the Court of Justice on the EU`s external competences.

Firstly, Opinion 2/15 on the EU-Singapore Free Trade Agreement clarified the scope of the common commercial policy (again a little further than the previous case-law). As usual, it left some issues unresolved and, as Fernando Castillo de la Torre noted, contained opaque passages about the nature of “shared jurisdiction.” Further clarifications were made in the cases of des cotif and the Lisbon Agreement. While the Court has made it clear in these cases that only the European Union can conclude agreements even in areas of shared competence, there is still some confusion on this issue. While the Lisbon Treaty aimed to simplify the legislation applicable to the EU`s external action, the book shows that the applicable legal, institutional and procedural frameworks remain complex and can lead to great uncertainty. With contributions from international specialists in the EU`s external action, this book shows why these free trade agreements have become a challenge for the EU and analyses how the EU has managed its institutional constraints in order to remain a major player in international trade. The chapters first examine issues relating to EU competences and the democratic issues raised by these agreements before addressing their implementation and enforcement, addressing these issues specifically from the perspective of EU law. Building on a broader research project led by the prestigious LAwTTIP network, this invaluable book explores contemporary debates and future challenges for EU institutions and Member States. However, the book goes far beyond the issue of the optional and mandatory combination of EU free trade agreements. Among the most interesting chapters of the first part are those dealing with the level of transparency of trade policy and democratic control of the EU, which has increased significantly compared to the new generation of EU free trade agreements (which have been concluded with highly competitive industrialized or emerging countries), as well as those dealing with the role played by the European Parliament and national parliaments in the negotiation of free trade agreements. of the EU. The second part of the book has a more technical approach, as it focuses on the implementation of EU free trade agreements. It begins by explaining the method of provisional application of EU mixed trade and investment agreements, and then explains the possible impact of the little-known joint committees established by such agreements on EU law and democratic control.

The book concludes with an analysis of the principle of effective legal protection and autonomy of EU law in relation to the mechanisms for settling real and possible disputes that are part of modern free trade agreements. As the drafters stressed, the EU must find appropriate responses to the constitutional challenges it still faces in its external trade relations in order to maintain its credibility on the international stage. This book gives a comprehensive overview of these challenges and some of the solutions that can be adopted (e.g. B the division of EU trade and investment agreements into two competences). Since the chapters are all on a relatively narrow topic, there is some overlap between them. However, this is not a problem because this slight repetition allows the reader to select separate chapters to read without having to go through all the previous ones. {{shippingLabel}} {{#showShipPrice}} {{bestListingForDislay.shippingToDestinationPriceInPurchaseCurrencyWithCurrencySymbol}} {{#showSurferCurrency}} ({{bestListingForDislay.shippingToDestinationPriceInSurferCurrencyWithCurrencySymbol}}) {{/showSurferCurrency}} {{/showShipPrice}} {{#showFreeShipping}} {{freeshipping}} {{/showFreeShipping}} {{shippingText}} To get the free app, enter your mobile phone number. . This special edition ISBN is currently not available. Description of the book Hardcover. Condition: brand new.

300 pages. 9.75×6.50×0.75 inches. In stock. Seller inventory # __1788974794. `); doc.close(); } } this.iframeload = function () { var iframe = document.getElementById(iframeId); iframe.style.display = “; setTimeout(function () { setIframeHeight(initialResizeCallback); }, 20); } function getDocHeight(doc) { var contentDiv = doc.getElementById(« iframeContent »); var docHeight = 0; if(contentDiv){ docHeight = Math.max( contentDiv.scrollHeight, contentDiv.offsetHeight, contentDiv.clientHeight ); } return docHeight; } function setIframeHeight(resizeCallback) { var iframeDoc, iframe = document.getElementById(iframeId); iframeDoc = ((iframe.contentWindow && iframe.contentWindow.document) || iframe.contentDocument); if (iframeDoc) { var h = getDocHeight(iframeDoc); if (h && h != 0) { iframe.style.height = parseInt(h) + `px`; if(typeof resizeCallback == « function ») { resizeCallback(iframeId); } } else if (nTries Johanna Jacobsson ist Assistant Professor an der IE University in Madrid, Spanien. She holds a PhD from the European University Institute (Florence, Italy) and an LL.B., LL.M. and BA from the University of Helsinki (Finland). His book “Preferential Services Liberalization: The Case of the European Union and Federal States” was published by Cambridge University Press in December 2019. Researchers and advanced students in international economic relations and international and European economic law, especially those interested in the EU`s external action, will find this book an indispensable read. It will also prove useful for those working in the EU institutions and in the administration of the WTO. More information about this seller| Contact this seller HRD Book Description. Condition: Nine.

New book. Shipping from the UK. Seller established since 2000. Seller`s Inventory # FW-9781788974790 Description of the Hardcover Book. Condition: Nine. New copy – Usually shipped within 4 business days. Seller`s Inventory # B9781788974790 Book Description Condition: Nine. Seller inventory #39273686-n. . Isabelle Bosse-Platière and Cécile Rapoport (Eds.). Contributors include: J.

Auvret-Finck, I. Bosse-Platière, F. Casolari, E. Castellarin, F. Castillo De La Torre, M. Chamon, L.-M. Chauvel, A. de Nanteuil, J.F. Delile, M. Gatti, E. Neframi, N.

Neuwahl, C. Rapoport, G. Sangiuolo, A. Susa, C. Tovo, W. Weiss, J. Wouters. .

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