The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit era

This paper focuses on an analysis of the sovereignty of two territorial entities that have unique relations with the United Kingdom: the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories (BOTs). Each of these entities includes very different territories, with different legal statuses and varyi...

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Main Author: Maria Mut Bosque
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Prince Edward Island 2020-05-01
Series:Island Studies Journal
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-5d2e7c160c374a018421bc1264f900682020-11-25T02:50:36ZengUniversity of Prince Edward IslandIsland Studies Journal1715-25931715-25932020-05-01151115116810.24043/isj.114The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit eraMaria Mut Bosque0School of Law, Universitat Internacional de Catalunya, Spain MINECO DER 2017-86138, Ministry of Economic Affairs & Digital Transformation, Spain Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London, UKThis paper focuses on an analysis of the sovereignty of two territorial entities that have unique relations with the United Kingdom: the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories (BOTs). Each of these entities includes very different territories, with different legal statuses and varying forms of self-administration and constitutional linkages with the UK. However, they also share similarities and challenges that enable an analysis of these territories as a complete set. The incomplete sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and BOTs has entailed that all these territories (except Gibraltar) have not been allowed to participate in the 2016 Brexit referendum or in the withdrawal negotiations with the EU. Moreover, it is reasonable to assume that Brexit is not an exceptional situation. In the future there will be more and more relevant international issues for these territories which will remain outside of their direct control, but will have a direct impact on them. Thus, if no adjustments are made to their statuses, these territories will have to keep trusting that the UK will be able to represent their interests at the same level as its own interests.brexitbritish overseas territories (bots)constitutional statuscrown dependencies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Mut Bosque
spellingShingle Maria Mut Bosque
The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit era
Island Studies Journal
brexit
british overseas territories (bots)
constitutional status
crown dependencies
author_facet Maria Mut Bosque
author_sort Maria Mut Bosque
title The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit era
title_short The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit era
title_full The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit era
title_fullStr The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit era
title_full_unstemmed The sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories in the Brexit era
title_sort sovereignty of the crown dependencies and the british overseas territories in the brexit era
publisher University of Prince Edward Island
series Island Studies Journal
issn 1715-2593
1715-2593
publishDate 2020-05-01
description This paper focuses on an analysis of the sovereignty of two territorial entities that have unique relations with the United Kingdom: the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories (BOTs). Each of these entities includes very different territories, with different legal statuses and varying forms of self-administration and constitutional linkages with the UK. However, they also share similarities and challenges that enable an analysis of these territories as a complete set. The incomplete sovereignty of the Crown Dependencies and BOTs has entailed that all these territories (except Gibraltar) have not been allowed to participate in the 2016 Brexit referendum or in the withdrawal negotiations with the EU. Moreover, it is reasonable to assume that Brexit is not an exceptional situation. In the future there will be more and more relevant international issues for these territories which will remain outside of their direct control, but will have a direct impact on them. Thus, if no adjustments are made to their statuses, these territories will have to keep trusting that the UK will be able to represent their interests at the same level as its own interests.
topic brexit
british overseas territories (bots)
constitutional status
crown dependencies
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