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dc.contributor.editorCARRERA, Sergio
dc.contributor.editorMITSILEGAS, Valsamis
dc.date.accessioned2018-12-18T14:37:29Z
dc.date.available2018-12-18T14:37:29Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.citationBrussels : Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS), 2017en
dc.identifier.isbn9789461386434
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/60240
dc.description.abstractThis collective volume offers a multidisciplinary examination of the critical issues and challenges associated with the EU's initiative to build a Security Union, particularly in relation to common policies adopted at the member state level aimed at countering terrorism and crime. It delves into the EU's efforts to support cross-border investigations, the exchange of information and international cooperation, taking stock of the effects on freedom and privacy. The various authors offer key research findings, which contributed to the European Commission's 2017 Comprehensive Assessment of EU Security Policy. They identify and explore the main constitutional dilemmas facing the Security Union concerning EU standards enshrined in the Lisbon Treaty and the commitments undertaken in the context of the EU Better Regulation agenda. Hence, this examination of EU security policies sheds light on their effectiveness, proportionality, fundamental rights and societal implications.en
dc.description.tableofcontents-- Foreword / Julian King -- Introduction / Sergio Carrera and Valsamis Mitsilegas -- Part I. Cross-Border Criminal Investigations and Preventive Justice -- 1. The Security Union as a paradigm of preventive justice: Challenges for citizenship, fundamental rights and the rule of law / Valsamis Mitsilegas -- 2. Two crucial challenges in cross-border criminal investigations / Anne Weyembergh -- 3. Old and new challenges to European criminal justice / Petra Bard -- 4. Reviewing the effectiveness of EU counter-terrorism policies / Fiona de Londras -- 5. The Radicalisation Awareness Network: Producing the EU counter-radicalisation discourse / Diana Davila Gordillo and Francesco Ragazzi -- Part II. EU Information Access and Exchange, and International Cooperation -- 6. Security of the interstice and interoperable data sharing: A first cut / Deirdre Curtin -- 7. International cooperation and the exchange of personal data: Safeguarding trust and fundamental rights / Evelien Brouwer -- 8. A Security Union in full respect of fundamental rights: But how effectively respectful? / Gloria Gonza´lez Fuster -- 9. Will more data bring more security? Remarks on the Security Union approach to interoperability / Reinhard Kreissl -- 10. Cross-border access to electronic evidence: Policy and legislative challenges / Katalin Ligeti and Gavin Robinson -- Part III. Conclusions -- 1. Constitutionalising the Security Union / Sergio Carrera and Valsamis Mitsilegasen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherCentre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)en
dc.titleConstitutionalising the Security Union : effectiveness, rule of law and rights in countering terrorism and crimeen
dc.typeBooken
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