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Title The Brexit challenge for Ireland and the United Kingdom : constitutions under pressure / edited by Oran Doyle, Trinity College Dublin; Aileen McHarg, University of Durham; Jo Murkens, London School of Economics and Political Science
Published Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021
©2021

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Description 1 online resource (xiv, 338 pages) : illustrations
Contents Introduction : the constitutional tensions of Brexit / Oran Doyle, Aileen McHarg, Jo Murkens -- Subsidiarity, competence, and the UK territorial constitution / Jo Hunt -- Brexit and the mechanisms for the resolution of conflicts in the context of devolution : do we need a new model? / Elisenda Casanas Adam -- Beyond matryoshka governance in the 21st century : the curious case of Northern Ireland / Sylvia de Mars, Aoife O'Donoghue -- Political parties in Northern Ireland and the post-Brexit constitutional debate / David Mitchell -- The constitutional significance of the people of Northern Ireland / C. R. G. Murray -- The constitutional politics of a United Ireland / Oran Doyle, David Kenny, Christopher McCrudden -- The minority rights implications of Irish unification / James Rooney -- Populism and popular sovereignty in the UK and Irish constitutional orders / Eoin Daly -- Party, democracy, and representation : the political consequences of Brexit / Malcolm Petrie -- Westminster versus Whitehall : what the Brexit debate revealed about an unresolved conflict at the heart of the British Constitution / David Howarth -- Brexit and the problem with delegated legislation / Adam Tucker -- Litigating Brexit / Christopher McCorkindale, Aileen McHarg -- The law officers : the relationship between executive lawyers and executive power in Ireland and the United Kingdom / Conor Casey -- In search of the constitution / Martin Loughlin
Summary "The United Kingdom's departure from the European Union on 31 January 2020 ran counter to recent trends of European history. Since the 1950s, European integration has included ever more countries with ever-softening borders between them. Progress was intermittent; the final destination both unclear and contested. But the direction of travel was set. In its apparent reversal of integration and its recreation of borders, Brexit is first and foremost a territorial event. The EU has lost one of its most powerful Member States. The future relationship between the UK and the EU, while still unclear at the time of writing, will be markedly different from what has pertained hereto; the movement of people, goods, services, and capital (the four freedoms of the European Single Market) across borders will be considerably more difficult"-- Provided by publisher
Analysis Brexit
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on August 19, 2021)
Subject European Union -- Great Britain.
European Union -- Ireland
SUBJECT European Union fast
Subject Constitutional law -- Great Britain.
Constitutional law -- Ireland
International and municipal law -- Great Britain
International and municipal law -- Ireland
Constitutional law
Diplomatic relations
International and municipal law
International economic integration
SUBJECT Great Britain -- Foreign relations -- Ireland
Ireland -- Foreign relations -- Great Britain
European Union countries -- Economic integration
Subject European Union countries
Great Britain
Ireland
Form Electronic book
Author Doyle, Oran, editor
McHarg, Aileen, editor
Murkens, Jo Eric, editor
LC no. 2021009385
ISBN 9781108966399
110896639X
9781108967426
1108967426