It identifies and analyses the most significant cases of divergence between the UK and EU which have taken place since Brexit. It explains what the changes are, what impact they are having, and likely further consequences.
UK in a Changing Europe’s series of regulatory divergence trackers provide an overview of where and how the UK has used its newfound regulatory freedoms to diverge from EU regulation.
This is the fifth edition of the tracker, covering changes which have
taken place since May 2022. It finds there are 13 cases of active
divergence (where the UK or some part of it changes its rules), nine of
passive divergence (where the EU changes its rules and the UK does not
follow), and three of procedural divergence (changes in the systems for
managing pre-existing divergence). In addition, there are two cases of a
new category – legal action – where the actions of one side result in
the other initiating a legal dispute.
The first edition can be found here, the second here, the third here, and the fourth here. For an overview of the politics of regulatory divergence during the period, see Research Associate Joël Reland’s analysis.
Full report
UKandEU
© UKandEU
Key
Hover over the blue highlighted
text to view the acronym meaning
Hover
over these icons for more information
Comments:
No Comments for this Article