The boundaries of the EU internal market : participation without membership

Author(s)

    • Öberg, Marja-Liisa

Bibliographic Information

The boundaries of the EU internal market : participation without membership

Marja-Liisa Öberg, Örebro University

(Cambridge studies in European law and policy)

Cambridge University Press, 2020

  • : hbk

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes index

Summary: "The competitive position of the European Union (EU) in the world depends not only on pure economic (trade) power but also the regulatory impact of the Union which is ever increasing. The EU's regulatory influence includes both participation in multilateral bodies that create global rules, standards and practices as well as spreading its own norms and values in exchange for access to the internal market"-- Provided by publisher

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The book examines the twofold 'boundaries' of the concept of the European Union's internal market - the geographical and the substantive - through the prism of expanding the internal market to third countries without enlarging the Union. The book offers a comprehensive analysis of the conditions under which the internal market can effectively be extended to third countries by exporting EU acquis via international agreements without sacrificing its defining characteristics. Theoretical rather than empirical in approach, the book scrutinises and meticulously questions the required level of uniformity within flexible integration relating to the substantive scope of the internal market, the role of foundational principles in the European Union's market edifice, and the institutional framework necessary for granting third country actors full participation in the internal market while safeguarding the autonomy of the Union's legal order.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Expanding the internal market: the phenomenon
  • Part I. Expanding the Internal Market: The Concept: 3. Internal market acquis: the concept
  • 4. Internal market: unity
  • 5. Internal market: the constitutional context
  • Part II. Expanding the Internal Market: Institutional Implications: 6. Autonomy of the EU legal order
  • 7. Institutional framework: defining the core of the internal market
  • 8. Institutional framework: safeguarding the core of the internal market
  • 9. Conclusion: internal market - united in everything but membership?

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