Weaponizing EU State Aid Law to Impact the Future of EU Investment Policy in the Global Context

· Studies in European Economic Law and Regulation Book 23 · Springer Nature
Ebook
309
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About this ebook

This book provides a comprehensive analysis of how EU state aid law is shaping the future of EU investment policy in a global context. It examines in detail how EU state aid policy and practice interact with the EU investment regime on the internal market and affect the external trade relations of the Member States and the EU alike. The debate this book engages in concerns competence, i.e., which body delineates the scope of state aid law and policy (now and in the future) when and where it intersects and collides with another distinct legal field: investment protection. Pursuing a doctrinal approach to the topic in the light of EU law and international law, the book analyses the interaction of the EU’s trade, state aid and investment policy. This is done by posing the following research question: How is EU state aid law shaping the future of EU investment policy in a global context? Further, the book puts forward three corresponding arguments. First, this influence can be seen in the EU’s incorporation of clauses promoting fair competition and state aid policy in international trade agreements. Second, EU state aid law and policy contributed to recent internal developments which led the Member States to terminate their bilateral agreements with each other (intra-EU BITs) by the end of 2019. Third, the EU has been working to replace the BITs between its Member States and third countries (extra-EU BITs) with its own trade agreements, which are aligned with EU legislation. This combined analysis of EU law and international law yields a number of interesting conclusions.
The book addresses a highly topical and rapidly evolving area of EU law and international investment law. It is also the first book to provide a comprehensive approach to the interplay of state aid rules and EU investment policy internally and externally, i.e., within the EU and on a global scale. As such, it closes an important gap in the extant literatureon international and EU law.

About the author

Dr Pamela Finckenberg-Broman is an Adjunct Member of Griffith University’ LFC. She has a background as an international businesswoman with a passion for international economic law and EU law and enjoys interdisciplinary research. In the area of law and technology she is co-creator and co-author in the RAiLE© research project, studying legal disruption caused by semiautonomous/autonomous AI’s combined with robotic embodiments.

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