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  • af Gesa Kubek
    2.833,95 kr.

    Beck internationalKübek/Tams/TerhechteEU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement*A HandbookBy Gesa Kübek, Prof. Dr. Christian J. Tams and Prof. Dr. Jörg Philipp Terchechte2024 Approx 550 pages. Hardcover approx. Euro 220,-ISBN 9783406819223A co-publication of C.H.BECK, Munich, Hart Publishing, Oxford, and Nomos, Baden-Baden.The BookIn force since 1 May 2021, the Trade and Cooperation Agreement is the central legal text governing post-Brexit relations between the UK and the EU. In essence, it is an ambitious "free trade plus" agreement that regulates economic issues, but also addresses a wealth of non-trade aspects. A thorough examination of the regulatory structures, content and contentious issues of the TCA is of major conceptual and practical importance.The present Handbook provides such a thorough examination and serves as a guide to the often complex provisions of the agreement and as a roadmap to an unwieldy agreement. To meet those aims, it offers an analysis of the TCA's individual chapters, matching the agreement's broad scope, from trade to data protection (and covering much in between). In addition to analysing the agreement's individual chapters, this TCA Handbook situates the new legal framework of UK-EU relations from the perspective of international law, European Union law and UK law.The Advantages at a GlanceHigh practical relevanceCovers a broad range of core trade and non-trade issuesClear analysisThe Target GroupFor legal practitioners and scholars active in the field of EU and international law.

  • af Gesa Kubek
    1.296,95 kr.

    This book offers the first thorough legal analysis of the practice of mixity since the Lisbon Treaty, providing the perspectives of international, EU, and national law. It sets out a detailed theoretical understanding of mixity, the common commercial policy, and the recent case law of the EU Court of Justice. It assesses recent practice and current challenges, such as the non-ratification of mixed agreements, Brexit, ensuring parliamentary participation in EU treaty-making, as well as the new architecture for concluding EU trade and investment agreements. In so doing, the author argues that in the field of trade and investment, mixity is no longer a purely procedural question but a substantive choice. This brings a fresh and innovative perspective to a key tenet of EU external relations law.