Synopses & Reviews
As the European Union has evolved, it has also begun to address policy questions which are closer to the very heart of the state. From cooperation in Justice and Home Affairs, originally conceived as the third pillar of European cooperation, has emerged the Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice (AFSJ).
Synopsis
1. Freedom, Security, and Justice: Intern- and Extern- alization in the EU and the Member States after the Lisbon Treaty.- 2. New Parliamentary Practices in Justice and Home Affairs: Some Observations.- 3. Non-Binding Peer Evaluation within an Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice.- 4. Redefining the relationship between security, data retention and human rights.- 5. The Externalization of undocumented migration controls as a threat for the EU's constitutional commitment to fundamental human rights?.- 6. Pr m Treaty and Pr m decision.- 7. The Interface between the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice and the Common Foreign and Security Policy of the EU: Legal Constraints to Political Objectives.
Synopsis
This book focuses on the institutional relations of policymaking in the Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice (AFSJ) in the EU. It investigates the tension between security and fundamental rights, data retention, and the policing of external borders.
Table of Contents
1. Freedom, Security, and Justice: