Ireland, more than any other member state, stands to be deeply and profoundly impacted by the UK's departure from the EU. The crisis which Ireland faces is multi-dimensional: economic and political, constitutional and existential in nature. The nature and impact of Brexit changes Ireland's ...
Brexit must have consequences “because if there were no consequences you might as well dissolve the EU tomorrow”. Ireland’s strategic priority must be “to stand four-square with other EU member states . . . From an Irish perspective, the biggest disaster . . . would be...
Since the Brexit deal fully came into force at the start of 2021, there has been an ongoing process to iron out the various issues it has thrown up relating to Northern Ireland. That has escalated over time to the point where a new agreement is now being ...
Under the terms of the proposed deal, the EU will have to give the UK notice of future EU regulations intended for Northern Ireland. The Joint Ministerial Committee will then be able to lodge an objection, which may then result in the EU voluntarily choosing to di...
This paper concerns respecting the rights of those in Northern Ireland (NI) and whether the wish of the majority in NI to remain part of the European Union (EU), as expressed in the 2016 Brexit referendum, will lead to a united Ireland. This paper will look at the political consequences ...
Post-Brexit, there is also the imminent and heretofore unanticipated prospect of an all-island Ireland. This carries the risk of major internal conflict. ... T Clonan 被引量: 0发表: 2023年 The European Union's Response to Covd-19 as an Existential Threat The agenda and referent subjects an...
LONDON, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- An alliance of politicians from Northern Ireland's political parties who are opposed to Brexit warned on Monday that a bad Brexit threatened peace in the province and could be "like a bomb going off".
The simplistic understanding of territorial sovereignty behind the Brexitian quest has come to expose the fundamental incompatibility of conflicting identities and sovereign claims over Northern Ireland. The inability to accommodate the complexity, the sharing of sovereignty, the multilevel nature of ...
BREXIT and us: Is Britain ‘waiving the rules’ ? So will it work? Can Scotland and the north of Ireland make a legitimate case when they say that they voted to stay in the EU, while the rest of the UK – excluding London – voted to leave it?
The government is under pressure to resolve the row which has left Northern Ireland without a functioning devolved government since early last year. The protocol was agreed between the EU and Mr Johnson as part of the Brexit agreement in 2020 in order to avoid ...