Options
The Island of Ireland and “Brexit” – a legal-political critique of the draft withdrawal agreement
Author(s)
Date Issued
2018-03-22
Date Available
2025-08-21T12:17:51Z
Abstract
Based on a legal analysis of the position of the island of Ireland in the draft withdrawal agree-ment, this paper argues that the draft does neither fully protect socio-economic and civic coop-eration on the island of Ireland, nor do justice to the Agreement concluded in Belfast on Good Friday 1998 (the 1998 Agreement). While the common regulatory area is an ingenious proposal to keep Northern Ireland in the Customs Union as well as the EU Internal Market for goods (in-cluding agricultural goods and electricity), the fledgling service economy on the island of Ireland remains unprotected, as well as civic cooperation and an all-island services of (social) general interests such as (higher) education and health care. As a consequence, even the second draft falls short of fully safeguarding NorthSouth cooperation on the island of Ireland. If that is to be achieved, Northern Ireland will have to remain not only in the Customs Union, but also in the In-ternal Market and covered by the EU citizenship acquis, including the anti-discrimination acquis. However, if Great Britain does not follow the same course, the existing constitutional diver-gence between Northern Ireland and Great Britain will become more pronounced. The draft is thus testimony to the decisive role of common EU membership of the UK and Ireland for safe-guarding the 1998 Agreement
Sponsorship
European Commission
Type of Material
Contribution to Newspaper/Magazine
Publisher
JMCE Tensions at the Fringes of the EU: Regaining the Union's Purpose (TREUP)
Web versions
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
The Island of Ireland and Brexit legal political critique of draft wa 2018.pdf
Size
830.2 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
8126364bcc9eda9199b22461c11ff2fb
Owning collection