ABSTRACT

Assessing the consequences of Brexit on EU policies, institutions and members, this book discusses the significance of differentiation for the future of European integration.

This book theoretically examines differentiated integration and disintegration, focuses on how this process affects key policy areas, norms and institutions of the EU, and analyses how the process of Brexit is perceived by and impacts on third countries as well as other organizations of regional integration in a comparative perspective. This edited book brings together both leading and emerging scholars to integrate the process of Brexit into a broader analysis of the evolution, establishment and impact of the EU as a system of differentiation.

This book will be of key interest to scholar and students of European Union politics, European integration, Brexit, and more broadly to Public Administration, Law, Economics, Finance, Philosophy, History and International Relations.

chapter 5|17 pages

Brexit and the European Economic Area

Semi- and quasi-EU citizenship as by-products of external differentiation

chapter 6|19 pages

European migration policy

Frontex, differentiation and Brexit

chapter 10|18 pages

Governing a ‘post-Brexit’ Europe and the case of Norway

Integration without membership in an affiliated state

chapter 12|17 pages

Differentiated (dis)integration in Europe and beyond

Historical and comparative perspectives

chapter 13|18 pages

Differentiated disintegration and third countries

The implications of Brexit for relations between the EU, the UK and Australia

chapter 14|12 pages

Conclusion

Whither differentiated (dis)integration in a ‘post-Brexit-era’?