Uncertainty surrounds most aspects of the Brexit negotiations, but in the sphere of sanctions there is a legal framework that provides guidance on what happens after the UK’s withdrawal from the EU. However, writes Anna Nadibaidze (Open Europe), the UK may choose to go its own way on occasion – particularly after situations like the Salisbury poisonings
In principle, EU law still applies in the UK until the day the country formally leaves. However, as ...
In recent weeks, the Trade and Cooperation Agreement between the UK and the EU has once again been m...
In the edited collection The UK after Brexit: Legal and Policy Challenges, Michael Dougan brings tog...
The Brexit Withdrawal Agreement has been unveiled, and there are serious limitations to the future p...
The UK has long been at the forefront of European cooperation against cross-border crime and terrori...
On September 22, Theresa May's speech in Florence ostensibly outlined a way forward on Brexit. Is th...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
What can the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic teach us about Britain’s approach to Brexit? Joelle...
Britons did not vote over what type of relationship or association the UK should have with the EU po...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
The EU has been popularly derided as ineffectual, but it has shown remarkable co-ordination and unit...
Being outside a customs union with the EU will mean that costs of many goods will be higher, risks a...
Linda Hantrais focuses on two ways in which social security provisions may be affected by Brexit: th...
David Clayton and David Higgins assess UK public procurement policy since the early 1970s. They expl...
In principle, EU law still applies in the UK until the day the country formally leaves. However, as ...
In recent weeks, the Trade and Cooperation Agreement between the UK and the EU has once again been m...
In the edited collection The UK after Brexit: Legal and Policy Challenges, Michael Dougan brings tog...
The Brexit Withdrawal Agreement has been unveiled, and there are serious limitations to the future p...
The UK has long been at the forefront of European cooperation against cross-border crime and terrori...
On September 22, Theresa May's speech in Florence ostensibly outlined a way forward on Brexit. Is th...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
What can the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic teach us about Britain’s approach to Brexit? Joelle...
Britons did not vote over what type of relationship or association the UK should have with the EU po...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
The EU has been popularly derided as ineffectual, but it has shown remarkable co-ordination and unit...
Being outside a customs union with the EU will mean that costs of many goods will be higher, risks a...
Linda Hantrais focuses on two ways in which social security provisions may be affected by Brexit: th...
David Clayton and David Higgins assess UK public procurement policy since the early 1970s. They expl...
In principle, EU law still applies in the UK until the day the country formally leaves. However, as ...
In recent weeks, the Trade and Cooperation Agreement between the UK and the EU has once again been m...
In the edited collection The UK after Brexit: Legal and Policy Challenges, Michael Dougan brings tog...