The Brexit and Gibraltar

The last thread of the British exit?

Authors

  • Tímea Varga University of Pécs, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary Doctoral School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15170/PSK.2023.04.01.03

Keywords:

Gibraltar, Brexit, sovereignity, European Union, United Kingdom, Spain

Abstract

The United Kingdom has officially left the European Union on 31 December, 2020. How-ever, the procedure that has begun with the Brexit referendum in 2016 is still not complete: there are certain questions to be answered and deals to be made. One of the biggest problems is the question of the so-called hard borders: Northern Ireland and Gi-braltar. Even though the UK and Spain could finally agree on a deal in the end of December 2020 which could make Gibraltar part of the Schengen Area, the problem is yet to be solved. A transition period has started on the 1 January 2021, in the end of which a treaty will have to be signed by both countries, agreeing on the status of the peninsula, however, that has not happened so far. In this paper I am addressing the difficult situation of the peninsula, what this new deal could mean for London, Madrid and Gibraltar. Furthermore, I would also like to elaborate on prospects for the future treaty, and whether Brexit could change the fact that the peninsula belongs to the United Kingdom.

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Published

2023-08-31

Issue

Section

Studies