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The European Union (EU) has had a profound effect upon its members’ environmental policy. Even in the United Kingdom (UK), the EU’s most recalcitrant member state (historically labeled the ‘Dirty man of Europe’), environmental policy has been Europeanised. As the UK moves to the EU’s exit door it is timely to assess the utility of Europeanisation for understanding policy dynamics in the UK. Drawing upon interviews and extensive engagement with stakeholders, this article analyses the potential impact of Brexit upon environmental policy and politics. The analytical toolkit offered by de-Europeanisation is developed to identify the factors that drive and inhibit de-Europeanisation processes, thereby providing insights that may be applicable in other settings. Disengagement and policy stagnation are presented as more likely environmental outcomes of Brexit, with capacity emerging as a central explanatory variable.
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Charlotte Burns
University of Sheffield
Viviane Gravey
Queen's University Belfast
Andrew Jordan
University of East Anglia
Environmental Politics
University of Sheffield
Newcastle University
University of East Anglia
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Burns et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d75c2ff182769aa8b8aa0f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09644016.2019.1549774