Origins and Consequences of European Crises: Global Views on Brexit
Summary
In order to examine the origins and consequences of Brexit, this publication develops two original perspectives. On the one hand, it has taken a pluridisciplinary approach comparing the point of views of sociologists, political scientists, legal experts and historians. On the other hand, it has adopted a global approach by comparing the analyses of Japanese, Canadian, American and European researchers. These "Global Views on Brexit" regroup the contributions to an international Conference on "The Consequences of Brexit" organised on 6-7 December 2018 in Strasbourg, in the framework of the Jean Monnet project on Crises in European Border Regions supported by the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union (EU) for the period from 2018-2020.
Excerpt
Table Of Contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- About the author
- About the book
- This eBook can be cited
- Contents
- Introduction (Birte Wassenberg)
- Part 1: Brexit as a Historical and Political Process
- Brexit, World War II Memory, and the Rhetoric of Appeasement (Stephanie Barczewski)
- Brexit as a Result of European Struggles over the UK’s Financial Sector (Daisuke Ikemoto)
- The Undemocratic Effects of a Referendum: One of the Many Paradoxes of Brexit. A Legal Perspective (Frédérique Berrod)
- Part 2: The Social Consequences of Brexit
- The Right to Family Reunification after Brexit: The Impossible Status Quo (Aude Bouveresse)
- Brexit and Its Impact on the Integration of Migrants in the UK (Seiko Oyama)
- Effects of Brexit on UK Nationals Living in France (Noriko Suzuki)
- Part 3: The Economic and Legal Consequences of Brexit
- The “Real” Costs of Brexit (Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly)
- From Opting Out to Brexit in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice (Catherine Haguenau-Moizard)
- Part 4: The (Geo-)Political Consequences of Brexit
- The Consequences of Brexit for the Island of Ireland ‘Deal or No Deal’ (Ruth Taillon)
- Brexit’s Territorial Externalities (Jeremy Sacramento & Jaume Castan Pinos)
- European Union-Japan Relations in the Shadow of Brexit (Ken Masujima)
- About the Authors
- Series « Borders and European Integration »
- Series Editors
- Scientific Board
- Series titles
Birte Wassenberg & Noriko Suzuki (eds.)
Origins and Consequences
of European Crises:
Global Views on Brexit
Border Studies – Borders and European Integration
Vol. 2
This publication is supported by the Humanities and Social Sciences English-language Scholarly Book Publishing Support Program FY2019 of Waseda University & the Jean Monnet Erasmus + Program of the European Union
This publication has been peer reviewed.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photocopy, microfilm or any other means, without prior written permission from the publisher. All rights reserved.
© P.I.E. PETER LANG s.a.
Éditions scientifiques internationales
Brussels, 2020
1 avenue Maurice, B-1050 Bruxelles, Belgium
brussels@peterlang.com ; www.peterlang.com
ISBN 978-2-8076-1539-7 ISSN 2736-2450
ePDF 978-2-8076-1540-3 DOI 10.3726/b17294
ePub 978-2-8076-1541-0 D/2020/5678/42
Mobi 978-2-8076-1542-7
Bibliographic information published by “Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek”. “Die Deutsche National Bibliothek” lists this publication in the “Deutsche Nationalbibliografie”; detailed bibliographic data is available on the Internet at <http://dnb.de>.
About the author
Birte Wassenberg is Professor of Contemporary History at the Political Sciences Institute (IEP), University of Strasbourg. She holds a Jean Monnet Chair on the contribution of cross-border cooperation to the European Neighborhood Policy and is Co-Director of the Franco-German Jean Monnet excellence Center in Strasbourg, Member of the Research Unit UMR Dynamiques européennes and Director of the Master 2 Border Studies in International Relations. Recent publications: Castle-talks on Cross-Border Cooperation. Fear of Integration? The Pertinence of the Border, Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart, 2018, The History of the Committee of Regions. 25 years of cities and regions furthering European Integration, Committee of Regions, Brussels, 2020.
Noriko Suzuki is Professor in the Department of Social Sciences at Waseda University, in Japan. She is specialized in political sociology. She works on the European citizenship and political participation of European citizens living in the other EU Member States.
À propos du livre
Almost sixty years after the signature of the Treaty of Rome in 1957 creating the European Community), a Member-State, the United Kingdom, has for the first time in history decided to leave the European Union. The “yes” to leave vote during the British referendum on 26 June 2016 led to the use of Article 50 of the EU Treaty triggering off a long period of negotiations between the UK and the EU, which was overshadowed by a permanent struggle between the options of a “deal” or a “no-deal”. The Withdrawal Agreement was finally signed on 24 January 2020 and Brexit actually took place on 31 January 2020 – more than three and a half years after the referendum. It is not surprising that a lot of analyses have been put forward to explain the British electoral result, mainly from the perspective of political sociology. However, there has been less research so far on the deeper roots of Brexit as a historical and political process and its development from the start of the referendum campaign until the end of the negotiations between the UK and the EU, nor on its possible social, economic, legal and (geo)political consequences.
In order to examine the origins and consequences of Brexit, this publication develops two original perspectives. On the one hand, it has taken a pluridisciplinary approach comparing the point of views of sociologists, political scientists, legal experts and historians. On the other hand, it has adopted a global approach by comparing the analyses of Japanese, Canadian, American and European researchers. These “Global Views on Brexit” regroup the contributions to an international Conference on “The Consequences of Brexit” organised on 6-7 December 2018 in Strasbourg, in the framework of the Jean Monnet project on Crises in European Border Regions supported by the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union (EU) for the period from 2018-2020.
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Contents
Birte Wassenberg
Part 1: Brexit as a Historical and Political Process
Brexit, World War II Memory, and the Rhetoric of Appeasement
Stephanie Barczewski
Brexit as a Result of European Struggles over the UK’s Financial Sector
Daisuke Ikemoto
The Undemocratic Effects of a Referendum: One of the Many Paradoxes of Brexit. A Legal Perspective
Frédérique Berrod
Part 2: The Social Consequences of Brexit
The Right to Family Reunification after Brexit: The Impossible Status Quo
Aude Bouveresse
Brexit and Its Impact on the Integration of Migrants in the UK
Seiko Oyama
Effects of Brexit on UK Nationals Living in France
Noriko Suzuki
Part 3: The Economic and Legal Consequences of Brexit
Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly
From Opting Out to Brexit in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
Catherine Haguenau-Moizard
Part 4: The (Geo-)Political Consequences of Brexit
The Consequences of Brexit for the Island of Ireland ‘Deal or No Deal’
Ruth Taillon
Brexit’s Territorial Externalities
Jeremy Sacramento & Jaume Castan Pinos
European Union-Japan Relations in the Shadow of Brexit
Ken Masujima
Details
- Pages
- 228
- Publication Year
- 2020
- ISBN (PDF)
- 9782807615403
- ISBN (ePUB)
- 9782807615410
- ISBN (MOBI)
- 9782807615427
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9782807615397
- DOI
- 10.3726/b17294
- Language
- English
- Publication date
- 2020 (November)
- Published
- Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Warszawa, Wien, 2020. 228 pp., 1 fig. b/w, 2 tables.