【Routledge版 ヨーロッパにおける正義と内政研究】
The Routledge Handbook of Justice and Home Affairs Research(Routledge International Handbooks) H 516 p. 17
目次
PART I: Introduction 1. Justice and Home Affairs Research – Introducing the State of the Art and Avenues for Further Research [Florian Trauner and Ariadna Ripoll Servent] PART II: Theories of Justice and Home Affairs 2. The Governance of Internal Security – Beyond Functionalism and the Finality of Integration? [Raphael Bossong and Hendrik Hegemann] 3. Securitization: Turning an Approach into a Framework for Research on EU Justice and Home Affairs [Christian Kaunert and Ikrom Yakubov] 4. Public Policy Approaches and the Study of European Union Justice and Home Affairs [Mark Rhinard] PART III: Analyzing Justice and Home Affairs Policies (The Sectoral Dimension) 5. Asylum and Refugee Protection: EU Policies in Crisis [Petra Bendel and Ariadna Ripoll Servent] 6. The Irregular Immigration Policy Conundrum: Problematizing ‘Effectiveness’ as a Frame for EU Criminalization and Expulsion Policies [Sergio Carrera and Jennifer Allsopp] 7. Informalizing EU Readmission Policy [Jean-Pierre Cassarino] 8. Border Management: The Schengen Regime in Times of Turmoil [Ruben Zaiotti] 9. EU Visa Policy: Decision-Making Dynamics and Effects on Migratory Processes [Mathias Czaika and Florian Trauner] 10. EU Labor Immigration Policy: From Silence to Salience [Georg Menz] 11. Organized Crime: Balancing National Sensitivities with Global Necessities [Daniela Irrera] 12. Cyber Crime as a Fragmented Policy Field in the Context of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice [Helena Carrapico and Benjamin Farrand] 13. EU Counter-Terrorism: Glass Half-Full or Half-Empty [Oldrich Bures] 14. Data Protection Policies in EU Justice and Home Affairs – A Multilayered and Yet Unexplored Territory for Legal Research [Paul de Hert and Vagelis Papakonstantinou] 15. EU Home Affairs and Technology: How to Make Sense of Information and Data Processing [Julien Jeandesboz] 16. EU Criminal Law: An Expanding Field for Research, With Some Unchartered Territories [Anne Weyembergh and Chloé Brière] 17. Judicial Cooperation in Civil Matters – Coming of Age? [Eva Storskrubb and Anna Wallerman] 18. Family Reunification and Migrant Integration Policies in the EU: Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion [Saskia Bonjour] PART IV: Justice and Home Affairs Inside and Outside Europe (The Horizontal Dimension) 19. Europe's Core Member States: Intended and Unintended Consequences of Strong Policy-Shaping Traditions [Andreas Ette] 20. Southern Europe: Twenty-Five Years of Immigration Control on the Waterfront [Claudia Finotelli] 21. Differentiated Integration and the Brexit-Process in EU Justice and Home Affairs [Steve Peers] 22. Central and Eastern Europe: The EU’s Struggle for Rule of Law Pre- and Post-Accession [Ramona Coman] 23. The Western Balkans: Decreasing EU External Leverage Meets Increasing Domestic Reform Needs [Florian Trauner and Zoran Nechev] 24. Justice and Home Affairs in EU-Turkey Relations: Mutual Interests but Much Distrust [Alexander Bürgin] 25. The Eastern Partnership Countries and Russia: A Migration-Driven Cooperation Agenda with the European Union [Oleg Korneev and Peter Van Elsuwege] 26. The Southern Mediterranean: A Testing Ground and a Litmus Test for EU JHA Policies and Research [Sarah Wolff and Patryk Pawlak] 27. Africa-EU Relations on Organized Crime: Between Securitization and Fragmentation [Judith Vorrath and Verena Zoppei] 28. The Evolution of Transatlantic Legal Integration: Truly, Madly, Deeply? EU – US Justice and Home Affairs [Elaine Fahey] 29. EU Cooperation in Justice and Home Affairs with Australia and Canada: New Ties that Bind? [Agnieszka Weinar] 30. The EU and Latin America: A Real Security and Development Nexus or A Superficial One? [Arantza Gómez Arana] 31. The EU-ASEAN Relationship: Cooperation on Non-Traditional Security Threats between Discourse and Practice [Angela Pennisi di Floristella] PART V: EU Institutions and Decision-Making Dynamics (The Vertical Dimension) 32. The European Parliament in jJstice and Home Affairs: Becoming More Realistic at the Expense of Human Rights? [Ariadna Ripoll Servent] 33. The European Court of Justice as a Game Changer: Fiduciary Obligations in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice [Ester Herlin-Karnell] 34. The European Commission in Justice and Home Affairs: Pushing Hard to be a Motor of Integration [Natascha Zaun] 35. The Council and European Council in EU Justice and Home Affairs Politics [Christof Roos] 36. The Role of National Parliaments in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: High Normative Expectations, Low Empirical Results [Angela Tacea] 37. The EU’s Agencies: Ever More Important for the Governance of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice [Juan Santos Vara] 38. NGOs Go To Brussels: Challenges and Opportunities for Research and Practice in AFSJ [Emek M. Uçarer] 39. International Organizations and the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice [Claudio Matera]
カート
カートに商品は入っていません。