Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Europe endless – Kraftwerk
- Introduction
- 1 Lessons from the Past? The 1954 Association Agreement between the UK and the European Coal and Steel Community
- 2 From the European Free Trade Association to the European Economic Community and the European Economic Area: Portugal’s Post-Second World War Path
- 3 Norway and the European Economic Area: Why the Most Comprehensive Trade Agreement Ever Negotiated Is Not Good Enough
- 4 Switzerland: Striking Hard Bargains with Soft Edges
- 5 The Customs Union between Turkey and the European Union
- 6 Ukraine: The Association Agreement Model
- 7 Canada and the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement
- 8 The World Trade Organization Model
- 9 “Singapore on the Thames”
- 10 The United Kingdom and the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- 11 Australia (and New Zealand) after the 1973 “Great Betrayal”
- 12 What Future for the Crown Dependencies, Overseas Territories and Gibraltar?
- 13 The Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland: A Flexible and Imaginative Solution for the Unique Circumstances on the Island of Ireland?
- 14 EU–UK Security Relations after Brexit
- 15 The UK Still In Europe? Is the UK’s Membership of the Council of Europe In Doubt?
- Afterword
- Index
Afterword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 December 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Europe endless – Kraftwerk
- Introduction
- 1 Lessons from the Past? The 1954 Association Agreement between the UK and the European Coal and Steel Community
- 2 From the European Free Trade Association to the European Economic Community and the European Economic Area: Portugal’s Post-Second World War Path
- 3 Norway and the European Economic Area: Why the Most Comprehensive Trade Agreement Ever Negotiated Is Not Good Enough
- 4 Switzerland: Striking Hard Bargains with Soft Edges
- 5 The Customs Union between Turkey and the European Union
- 6 Ukraine: The Association Agreement Model
- 7 Canada and the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement
- 8 The World Trade Organization Model
- 9 “Singapore on the Thames”
- 10 The United Kingdom and the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- 11 Australia (and New Zealand) after the 1973 “Great Betrayal”
- 12 What Future for the Crown Dependencies, Overseas Territories and Gibraltar?
- 13 The Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland: A Flexible and Imaginative Solution for the Unique Circumstances on the Island of Ireland?
- 14 EU–UK Security Relations after Brexit
- 15 The UK Still In Europe? Is the UK’s Membership of the Council of Europe In Doubt?
- Afterword
- Index
Summary
The options presented in this book may appear, at first sight, mainly of academic interest because the United Kingdom has already left the European Union and the British government appears bent on a minimal agreement providing for free trade in goods, accompanied by limited provisions on services and a number of sectoral agreements. It is even ready to envisage a “no deal” Brexit, falling back on World Trade Organization (WTO) non-preferential terms, if no agreement is reached in the limited time available. However, as this volume goes to press, it would be a mistake to conclude that a thin deal or “no deal” Brexit is the last word on the future relationship.
The negotiations are taking place in an unusually fluid environment, in which Brexit is a lesser priority for both sides than coping with the overwhelming public health and economic crises. The two chief negotiators and the British prime minister succumbed to the Covid-19 virus for several weeks in spring 2020 and the negotiations have been conducted fitfully at a distance. Any agreement reached in the crisis atmosphere of 2020 is by nature provisional.
This Afterword draws attention to a number of considerations that might lead British and EU leaders to reconsider the nature of the future relationship in the months and years ahead: (1) the extraordinary circumstances in which the negotiations are being held; (2) geopolitical turbulence; (3) changes in the British political scene; and (4) different scenarios for the EU's own future. The Afterword concludes with tentative reflections on other models presented in earlier chapters that may prove instructive in the further evolution of UK–EU relations.
NEGOTIATIONS LIKE NO OTHERS
The negotiations between the EU and the UK to define their future relationship began in March 2020 and were always going to be difficult. The two sides’ objectives diverged widely on key provisions and the time available to overcome these differences was very short. Unless the UK requested and was granted by the end of June 2020 an extension to the transition period that was due to expire on 31 December 2020, the negotiations needed to be concluded, signed and ratified in less than ten months.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Outside the EUOptions for Britain, pp. 205 - 222Publisher: Agenda PublishingPrint publication year: 2020