The EU and Nanotechnologies: A Critical Analysis
By (Author) Tanja Ehnert
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
10th August 2017
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International law
Nanotechnology
Law of science and research, university college law
344.24095
Hardback
296
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
584g
This book investigates the role of law in confronting major societal transformations embodied by the emergence of nanotechnologies. Taking the case of the European Union, it explores who the key decision-makers in the regulation of nanotechnologies are and how they take decisions. The questions are explored through two distinct case studies: the food and chemicals sectors. The book charts an incremental retreat of the European Union to its executive powers, including soft law measures such as agencies guidelines or implementing measures. This, the author argues, results in the Unions fundamental democratic control mechanisms, the EU legislature and the Court of Justice of the EU, being circumvented. The book recommends several immediate proposals to reform EU risk regulation, advocating a greater reliance on the European Parliament and outlining measures to increase the transparency of guidance drafting by EU agencies. This important work provides a timely examination of how emerging technologies pose both regulatory and democratic challenges.
I recommend the book to academics in the fields of law and social sciences as well as to practitioners with an interest in EUs handling of new technologies and in EU policy design in general. Specifically, the book presents an abundant source of case material highlighting the desirability of a single legal framework for EU administrative procedure. -- Professor Stephan Meyer * European Journal of Risk Regulation *
Tanja Ehnert is a legal officer at the EU Ombudsman.