About the lecture

In this talk Professor Catherine Barnard will look at the growing emphasis on enforcement as part of upholding the rule of law, how free movement of persons provides a good case study of non-enforcement, and as a case study, the experiences of EU migrant workers in Great Yarmouth, a declining seaside resort with the fifth highest leave vote in the UK, where we see significant under-enforcement of employment rights in a legal aid desert. The question then is what do the workers do to get help, is it effective and are there lessons for labour enforcement more generally?

About Catherine Barnard

Professor Barnard is the author of EU Employment Law (Oxford, OUP, 2012), The Substantive Law of the EU: The Four Freedoms (Oxford, OUP, 2022), and (with Peers ed) European Union Law (Oxford, OUP, 2023). She is a member of the European Commission funded European Labour Law Network (ELLN). She is also a Senior Fellow of the UK in a Changing Europe (UKCE), a non-partisan think-tank which does research and provides information about all aspects of Brexit to the general public. She has appeared on the main media channels – BBC, ITV and Sky – as well as some of the more specialist programmes such as Law in Action, Woman’s Hour, Question Time, Any Questions and the Briefing Room. She has also written for the Guardian and the Telegraph. She has given evidence to numerous select committees on the legal issues connected with Brexit. She has her own podcast, 2903cb, and she blogs on Brexit, mainly for UK in a Changing Europe.

Practical information

The lecture will take place on the February 7th at at the Université libre de Bruxelles – Campus Solbosch (Auditoire Pierre Drion – R42.5.503) and will be followed by a reception. 

Registration

The event is free but please register here by February 1st, or contact us after this date at fwa.relations@ulb.be