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The Juridification of Individual Sanctions and the Politics of EU Law: Modern Studies in European Law

Autor Eva Nanopoulos
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 aug 2021
In the early 1990s the then European Community imposed for the first time a set of economic restrictions against a specific entity: the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola. Since then, the individualisation of sanctions has become entrenched, these so-called 'smart' sanctions have proliferated, their targets and scope of application have significantly expanded, and they operate in an increasingly juridified environment. This book aims to shed light on the constitutive dynamics and causes of these developments, with a focus on the juridification of individual sanctions at the European level. To this end it first revisits the phenomenon of individualisation - moving beyond the conventional narrative that individual sanctions emerged because of humanitarian and effectiveness concerns - and situates the 'smarting' of sanctions within the context of broader structural transformations characterised by the consolidation of the global neoliberal order. Second, the book explores why the role of law has been so pronounced in the European context by unearthing the connections between EU law and capitalist order building.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781509954711
ISBN-10: 1509954716
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Seria Modern Studies in European Law

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Uses the use of sanctions to suggest broader aims of both European law and politics

Notă biografică

Eva Nanopoulos is Lecturer in Law at Queen Mary, University of London.

Cuprins

Introduction I. Outlook: Conceptions of Juridification II. Methodology: Uncovering the Politics of Juridification III. Structure: Form, Content, Context PART ITHE FORM OF SANCTIONS: JURIDIFICATION AND INDIVIDUALISATION1. The Individualisation of Sanctions I. From State Sanctions to Individual Sanctions II. Causes of Individualisation: 'Smarting' Sanctions III. Character of Individualisation: Between Continuity and Change IV. Challenges of Individualisation V. Implications of Individualisation 2. From Individualisation to Juridification I. Legalising Individualisation II. Legitimising Individualisation III. Operationalising Individualisation 3. Juridification as the Product of Individualisation I. Patterns and Characteristics of Juridification II. Causes of Juridification III. Moving Beyond the Orthodoxy PART IITHE CONTENT OF SANCTIONS: JURIDIFICATION AND RECONFIGURATION4. Reconfiguration of UN Sanctions I. Reconfiguring Collective Security II. Reconfiguration and Individualisation III. What Reconfiguration? 5. Reconfiguration of EU Sanctions I. Absorbing Reconfiguration : From War to Security II. Reconfiguration and the Divide between External, Internal and National Security III. Reconfiguration and the Divide between Politics and Economics 6. Reconfiguration and Juridification I. Constituting Reconfiguration II. Managing Reconfiguration : UN Sanctions and the Primacy of Politics? III. Managing Reconfiguration : EU Sanctions and the Primacy of Economics/Law IV. From Juridification to Legal Reconfiguration PART IIITHE CONTEXT OF SANCTIONS: JURIDIFICATION AND PACIFICATION7. The Lens of Pacification I. Beyond Globalisation II. From Blurring to Ordering III. Legacies of Policing: Collective Sanctions and Order 8. Pacification and UN Sanctions I. Early Forms of Individualisation: Lessons from the American Experience II. The Internationalisation of Individual Sanctions III. Individual Sanctions and Order Building IV. Individualisation and Global (Imperial) Law 9. Pacification and EU Sanctions I. The EU and Pacification II. Sanctions and Pacification III. EU Law and Pacification IV. Juridification and Pacification Conclusion I. Law, Individual Sanctions and the Policing of Order II. What Order? Individual Sanctions and the Nascent Global Imperial State