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Policy change in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
DOI link for Policy change in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
Policy change in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice book
Policy change in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
DOI link for Policy change in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
Policy change in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice book
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ABSTRACT
The EU plays an increasingly important role in issues such as the fight against organised crime and the management of migration flows, transforming the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice (AFSJ) into a priority of the EU’s political and legislative agenda.
This book investigates whether institutional change - the gradual communitarisation of the AFSJ - has triggered policy change, and in doing so, explores the nature and direction of this policy change. By analysing the role of the EU’s institutions in a systematic, theory-informed and comparative way, it provides rich insights into the dynamics of EU decision-making in areas involving high stakes for human rights and civil liberties. Each chapter contains three sections examining:
- the degree of policy change in the different AFSJ fields, ranging from immigration and counter-terrorism to data protection
- the role of EU institutions in this process of change
- a case study determining the mechanisms of change.
The book will be of interest to practitioners, students and scholars of European politics and law, EU policy-making, security and migration studies, as well as institutional change.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I Introduction
chapter 1|8 pages
Setting the context: why EU institutions matter in justice and home affairs
chapter 2|22 pages
The analytical framework: EU institutions, policy change and the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
part |2 pages
Part II Migration policies
chapter 3|18 pages
Asylum: limited policy change due to new norms of institutional behaviour
chapter 4|20 pages
Borders: EU institutions fail to reconcile their agendas despite communitarisation
part |2 pages
Part III Internal security
chapter 6|21 pages
Counter- terrorism: supranational EU institutions seizing windows of opportunity
chapter 7|19 pages
Police cooperation: a reluctant dance with the supranational EU institutions
chapter 8|18 pages
Criminal law: institutional rebalancing and judicialisation as drivers of policy change
part |2 pages
Part IV Citizens’ Europe
chapter 9|25 pages
Citizenship and integration: contiguity, contagion and evolution
chapter 10|19 pages
Data protection: the EU institutions’ battle over data processing vs individual rights
chapter 11|20 pages
Civil justice: the contested nature of the scope of EU legislation
part |2 pages
Part V Conclusion