Open Strategic Autonomy in EU Trade Policy: Assessing the Turn to Stronger Enforcement and More Robust Interest Representation eu


Price:
£138

Description

Wolfgang Weiß, Cornelia Furculita


ISBN13: 9781009196536
Published: December 2024
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback

This is a Print On Demand Title.

This book analyses whether the recent reorientation of EU trade policy towards stronger enforcement and more robust representation of interests, resulting in a series of new or amended legislative tools, is in conformity with the EU's international commitments, particularly WTO, FTA, environmental, and general international law, and with its multilateralist stance and its underlying constitutional obligations.


The analysis is also set against the consequences that would flow from that within the EU legal order, providing readers with a comprehensive view of the external and internal constraints on trade policy that the EU should respect, as well as the leeway it enjoys. In case of potential tensions, it submits changes that would better balance the EU's new ambitions and international obligations. Furthermore, the book looks beyond the possible legal repercussions to consider the broader political implications of these instruments on the credibility of the EU's commitment to multilateralism and international law.

Contents:
1. Introduction


Part I. EU Trade Policy and its Constrain:
2. The EU's trade policy: past and prospect
3. External and internal constraints for the EU's open strategic autonomy in trade policy


Part II. The Tools for Stronger Enforcement of Trade Rights:
4. The EU-Led MPIA: an attempt to rescue the WTO dispute settlement
5. The amended trade enforcement regulation: addressing dispute settlement blockages
6. The anti-coercion instrument: is there a place for unilateralism under international rules?
7. Enforcement of the FTA TSD chapters: newfound strength?


Part III. The Tools for Assertive Representation of EU Interests:
8. The IPI regulation: a 'level playing field' for European economic operators in Foreign public procurement markets within international law confines?
9. The foreign subsidies regulation: the way forward to competitive equality and exterritoriality of EU competition law?
10. CBAM: in tension with EU's international trade and climate commitments
11. Conclusion


Bibliography

 

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