After Brexit: Rebuilding UK–EU Relations in Trade, Security and Law
MTA
A practical guide to the evolving bilateral relationship and how businesses, lawyers and officials should adapt
2nd Edition
*After Brexit: Rebuilding UK–EU Relations in Trade, Security and Law* provides a comprehensive operational guide to the post-departure landscape, focusing on the Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA), the Withdrawal Agreement, and the Windsor Framework. It details the shift from the seamless integration of EU membership to a complex, multi-layered bilateral relationship defined by "managed divergence." By moving beyond the politics of the referendum, the text focuses on the mechanics of trade in goods and services, the implementation of customs and border controls, and the new requirements for regulatory compliance such as UKCA marking and Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) checks.
The book explores the specific challenges faced by highly integrated sectors, including automotive, life sciences, and aerospace, where rules of origin and certification hurdles have forced a total re-evaluation of supply chain strategies. It highlights the significant loss of "passporting" rights in financial services and the end of free movement, which has replaced spontaneous mobility with rigid, points-based immigration systems and limited professional recognition. Furthermore, the text examines the transformation of internal security and judicial cooperation, noting that while mechanisms for extradition and data sharing persist, they are now more bureaucratic and lack the real-time efficiency of previous EU-wide databases.
A central theme is the new governance architecture, led by the Partnership Council and various specialized committees, which serve as the primary forums for dialogue and dispute resolution. The book explains the legal escalation process from consultations to independent arbitration and the potential for "rebalancing measures"—trade sanctions or tariffs—should one party significantly diverge from agreed standards in labor, environment, or subsidy control. This framework underscores that while the UK has regained regulatory sovereignty, the economic consequences of exercising that autonomy are managed through a sophisticated system of international law rather than supranational oversight.
Ultimately, the book outlines three potential future pathways: deepening cooperation through bespoke sectoral deals, further decoupling to prioritize regulatory independence, or settling into a stable but distanced re-alignment. It emphasizes that the post-Brexit settlement is a "living" reality that requires businesses, lawyers, and officials to adopt proactive strategies, such as horizon scanning and dual-compliance modeling. By translating abstract treaty provisions into concrete decision points, the work serves as a practical roadmap for navigating the ongoing friction and evolving opportunities of the cross-Channel relationship.
This book is designed for businesses engaged in UK-EU trade, legal practitioners advising on cross-border matters, and government officials or policymakers responsible for implementing or complying with the new arrangements. It will also benefit supply chain managers, compliance officers, and sector specialists (e.g., automotive, life sciences, financial services) who need practical tools to navigate regulatory changes, customs procedures, and market access requirements.
April 29, 2026
51,145 words
3 hours 35 minutes
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