Listing 1 - 10 of 26 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
EU Diplomatic Law provides a thorough analysis of the interactions between the European Union (EU) and international diplomatic and consular law. Over the past six decades, the EU has been granted unique powers that enable it to act prominently on the international plane, thereby developing a worldwide bilateral and multilateral diplomatic network. Much like states, the EU sends ambassadors to all corners of the world and accredits permanent missions at itsBrussels' headquarters. These developments shake the foundations of diplomatic and consular law, as these branches of international law are based on the principles of state sovereignty, non-interference, and reciprocity. Traditional conceptions of international law only allow states to perform diplomatic andconsular functions, leaving little room for non-state entities such as the EU.Sanderijn Duquet addresses this fundamental problem by re-visiting the foundations of diplomatic and consular law, as well as analysing EU practice in initiating, conducting, and terminating diplomatic and consular relations. In particular, she focuses on the scope of EU diplomatic and consular powers, especially in relationship to its member states; its application of the Vienna Conventions and customary international law; the EU's use of creative legal techniques; the diplomatic and consularprotection of EU citizens; questions of protocol and precedence; and the legal status of the EU's diplomatic staff and premises abroad. By critically analysing these issues, this book assesses the specific contribution the EU makes to the shaping of diplomatic and consular law.
Choose an application
Diplomatic and consular service, European --- History --- Europe --- Europe. --- Foreign relations
Choose an application
Diplomatic and consular service, European --- Dragomen --- History --- Istanbul (Turkey) --- History.
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
This book is the first monograph on one of the least studied and most controversial European Union citizenship rights. Despite the importance of consular protection in a globalised world, many EU Member States are reluctant to recognise consular protection for EU citizens abroad as a right, leading to a protracted struggle to place the right to consular protection on a solid legal basis through a directive. This book examines the right to consular protection as an illustrative case in the debate over a multilevel design of EU citizenship combining rules from several different legal systems, whose interplay is reinforced by the extra-territorial character of consular protection. It offers a comparative analysis of the provision of consular protection in the 28 EU Member States as well as of the respective international law and EU rules. By examining the right to consular protection in its constitutional setting as a right flowing from EU citizenship, the book frames the analysis of all EU citizenship rights as fundamental rights in a multilevel-governance context.
Diplomatic and consular service [European ] --- Diplomatieke en consulaire dienst [Europese ] --- Service diplomatique et consulaire européen --- Citizenship --- Civil rights --- Diplomatic and consular service, European --- European Union countries --- Citizenship - European Union countries --- Civil rights - European Union countries
Choose an application
The international order is experiencing fundamental changes driven by globalisation and the multipolarity emerging from the new balance of power. In response, a new book by a team of experts assembled by CEPS argues that the EU should build up a world-class diplomatic corps, capable of becoming a major actor in global affairs, drawing on enabling provisions in the Treaty of Lisbon. The report investigates two prerequisites for achieving this goal: first, enhancement of the status of the EU in numerous multilateral organisations, International agreements and fora (the UN, IMF, etc.) and second, a restructuring of European diplomacy, involving a reallocation of functions and resources between the new European diplomatic corps (the European External Action Service) and the diplomatic representations of the 27 EU member states worldwide. Recommendations are formulated on where and how to upgrade the EU's status in the international arena. Scenarios are presented for the build-up of the EU's diplomatic corps, alongside a slimming down of national diplomacies. The authors warn that failure to act along these lines will result in an increasingly irrelevant, obsolete and wasteful European diplomacy.--Publisher description.
Choose an application
Diplomacy --- Diplomatie --- Diplomatic and consular service, European. --- Services diplomatiques et consulaires --- Sex role --- Rôle selon le sexe. --- History. --- Histoire.
Choose an application
"Les "relations internationales" à l'époque médiévale ont constitué un champ de recherches privilégié au XIXe siècle et jusqu'aux premières décennies du siècle suivant. Inspirés par la conception positiviste d'une histoire fondamentalement événementielle et institutionnelle, ces travaux ont connu, tout particulièrement en France, un discrédit de plus en plus profond au cours du XXe siècle. Ces dernières années cependant, à l'étranger comme en France, l'histoire des "relations internationales" et de la diplomatie a été l'objet de nouvelles études majeures, qui rompent radicalement avec les conceptions qui présidaient à la rédaction des ouvrages anciens. Elles adoptent une perspective d'anthropologie politique, écrivent à nouveaux frais l'histoire des relations entre rois, princes et puissants à la lumière des acquis de l'historiographie de la résolution des conflits, éclairent le fonctionnement concret du travail des ambassadeurs et montrent le caractère décisif qu'il a eu pour la pratique des "relations internationales". Le nombre et l'importance de ces publications nécessitaient qu'un ouvrage d'ensemble donne une synthèse des études déjà publiées, et ouvre de nouvelles pistes à l'intérieur de ce champ de recherches."--Page 4 of cover. Les "relations internationales" à l'époque médiévale ont constitué un champ de recherches privilégié au XIXe siècle et jusqu'aux premières décennies du siècle suivant. Inspirés par la conception positiviste d'une histoire fondamentalement événementielle et institutionnelle, ces travaux ont connu, tout particulièrement en France, un discrédit de plus en plus profond au cours du XXe siècle. Ces dernières années cependant, à l'étranger comme en France, l'histoire des "relations internationales" et de la diplomatie a été l'objet de nouvelles études majeures, qui rompent radicalement avec les conceptions qui présidaient à la rédaction des ouvrages anciens. Elles adoptent une perspective d'anthropologie politique, écrivent à nouveaux frais l'histoire des relations entre rois, princes et puissants à la lumière des acquis de l'historiographie de la résolution des conflits, éclairent le fonctionnement concret du travail des ambassadeurs et montrent le caractère décisif qu'il a eu pour la pratique des "relations internationales". Le nombre et l'importance de ces publications nécessitaient qu'un ouvrage d'ensemble donne une synthèse des études déjà publiées, et ouvre de nouvelles pistes à l'intérieur de ce champ de recherches.
Diplomatie --- Europe --- Politique et gouvernement --- Diplomacy --- Diplomatic and consular service, European --- International relations --- Diplomacy. --- Diplomatic and consular service, European. --- Diplomatic relations. --- International relations. --- History --- To 1500. --- Europe. --- Foreign relations. --- Foreign relations --- Treaties. --- Treaties --- Diplomacy - History - To 1500 --- Diplomatic and consular service, European - History - To 1500 --- International relations - History - To 1500 --- Europe - Foreign relations --- Europe - Foreign relations - Treaties
Listing 1 - 10 of 26 | << page >> |
Sort by
|