EU Law of the Overseas: Outermost Regions, Associated Overseas Countries and Territories, Territories Sui Generis
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Millions of British, Dutch, French, Danish,
Spanish, and Portuguese nationals
permanently reside in the overseas parts of
their Member States. These people,
like the companies registered in such
territories, often find it virtually
impossible to determine what law applies
when legal decisions are required.
Although Article 52(1) of the EU Treaty
clearly states that EU law applies in
the territory of all the Member States,
most Member State territories lying
outside of Europe provide examples of
legal arrangements deviating from this
rule. This book, for the first time in
English, gathers these deviations into
a complex system of rules that the
editor calls the 'EU law of the Overseas'.
Member States' territories lying
far away from the European continent either
do not fall within the scope of
EU law entirely, or are subject to EU law with
serious derogations. A huge
gap thus exists between the application of EU law
in Europe and in the
overseas parts of the Member States, which has not been
explored in the
English language literature until now. This collection of
essays sets out to
correct this by examining the principles of Union law
applicable to such
territories, placing them in the general context of the
development of
European integration. Among the key legal issues discussed are
the
following:
* internal market outside of Europe;
* the protection of
minority cultures;
* EU citizenship in the overseas countries and territories
of the EU;* Article 349 TFEU as a source of derogations;
* the implications of Part IV TFEU for the overseas acquis;
* participatory methods of reappraisal of the relationship between the EU and
the overseas;
* implications for the formation of strategic alliances;
* voting in European elections;
* what matters may be referred by courts and tribunals in overseas countries
and territories;
* application of the acquis to the parts of the Member States not controlled
by the government or excluded from ratione loci of EU law;
* interplay of the Treaty provisions and secondary legislation in the overseas;
* customs union;
* wholly internal situations;
* free movement of capital and direct investments in companies;
* the euro area outside of Europe;
* duty of loyal cooperation in the domain of EU external action;
* territorial application of EU criminal law; and
* territorial application of human rights treaties.
Twenty-two leading experts bring their well-informed perspectives to this
under-researched but important subject in which, although rules abound and
every opportunity to introduce clarity into the picture seems to be present,
the situation is far from clear. the book will be welcomed by serious scholars
of European Union law and by public international lawyers, as well as by
policy-makers and legal practitioners.