Results 11 to 20 of about 3,959 (130)

Negative Integration Is What States Make of It? Tackling Labour Exploitation in the German Meat Sector

open access: yesJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, Volume 61, Issue 4, Page 917-934, July 2023., 2023
Abstract In this article, we trace Germany's recent reform (and its precursors) seeking to remedy precarious working conditions in the meat sector. Focusing on an extreme case of labour exploitation, and asking how unique it is, allows us to uncover which institutional features of EU Member States condition the liberalization effects of negative ...
Michael Blauberger, Susanne K. Schmidt
wiley   +1 more source

Does the European Court of Justice induce societal change? The record so far—with a green future in mind

open access: yesEuropean Law Journal, Volume 29, Issue 3-6, Page 281-293, May-November 2023., 2023
Abstract Over the seven decades of its existence, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has performed well as a conflict‐solving institution. From the existing literature, it becomes less clear however to what extent it served as an effective agent for societal change.
Henri de Waele
wiley   +1 more source

Brexit, food law and the UK's search for a post‐EU identity

open access: yesThe Modern Law Review, Volume 85, Issue 5, Page 1168-1190, September 2022., 2022
Food law has played a central, contested role in defining the UK's post‐Brexit identity as a regulating and trading nation. Mapping reforms to key areas of food law across retained EU law, the UK internal market and UK trade law and policy reveals profound reforms, and an emerging, distinct UK approach to law‐making. We identify three themes: increased
Emily Lydgate, Chloe Anthony
wiley   +1 more source

The Governance of Economic Unionism after the United Kingdom Internal Market Act

open access: yesThe Modern Law Review, Volume 85, Issue 3, Page 635-660, May 2022., 2022
Abstract With the United Kingdom having finally withdrawn from the European Union, and with a new Trade and Cooperation Agreement in place to begin to manage their economic relationship, it might be thought that the constitutional drama of ‘Brexit’ was finally at an end.
Kenneth A. Armstrong
wiley   +1 more source

Beyond 1973: UK Accession and the Origins of EC Consumer Policy

open access: yesGlobal Policy, Volume 13, Issue S2, Page 20-29, April 2022., 2022
Abstract This article examines the role of the accession of the UK in the development of the European Community's consumer policy. It will show that British accession boosted the development of EC consumer policy by influencing the European Commission's 1975 programme for consumer and information policy and by providing the Commission with political ...
Brigitte Leucht
wiley   +1 more source

Movement of Goods under the TCA

open access: yesGlobal Policy, Volume 13, Issue S2, Page 106-118, April 2022., 2022
Abstract For many people, trade is about goods and so the most momentous aspect of the Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) is the provisions on goods. This article looks at the provisions on the trade in goods under the TCA and compares them with those on the Customs Union and the Single Market for goods under EU law (which still apply to Northern ...
Catherine Barnard, Emilija Leinarte
wiley   +1 more source

The emerging role of the EU as a primary normative actor in the EU Area of Criminal Justice

open access: yesEuropean Law Journal, Volume 27, Issue 4-6, Page 378-407, November 2021., 2021
Abstract This article explores the role and justifications for EU action in the EU Area of Criminal Justice, also relying on a comparison with the justifications for EU action in the internal market. It distinguishes between a role for the EU as a subsidiary policy actor and as a primary policy actor.
Irene Wieczorek
wiley   +1 more source

Remapping the European agenda‐setting landscape

open access: yesPublic Administration, Volume 99, Issue 2, Page 290-303, June 2021., 2021
Abstract In the European Union (EU), agenda setting is formally centralized at the European Commission. During the last decade since the Lisbon Treaty, however, this agenda‐setting monopoly was challenged by other institutions against the backdrop of the Treaty change, intergovernmental crisis management, politicization, and more informal legislative ...
Henning Deters, Gerda Falkner
wiley   +1 more source

Bridging the gap between facts and norms: mutual trust, the European Arrest Warrant and the rule of law in an interdisciplinary context

open access: yesEuropean Law Journal, Volume 27, Issue 1-3, Page 167-184, January-May 2021., 2021
Abstract The rule‐of‐law‐backsliding in some Member States has subverted not only one of the EU fundamental values but also trust among national authorities when implementing European Arrest Warrants (EAW). However, when evaluating the execution of EAWs issued by countries experiencing rule‐of‐law crises, the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) sought to
Patricia Popelier   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

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