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Chapter 6 - Rethinking EU Social and Labour Law through Racial Capitalism

from Part I - Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 October 2025

Hanna Eklund
Affiliation:
University of Copenhagen

Summary

This chapter explores the interconnections between European colonialism and European integration, in particular in the creation of the single market. It examines the emergence of regional (EU) social and labour law against the backdrop of decolonization, arguing that the EU market integration project, and the ability to embed that market in the ‘social’, owe much to the ‘racial capitalism’ of European colonial dominance over the territory and resources of other regions. Exploring the temporal and the spatial dimensions of EU integration, a key argument of the chapter is that there has been no clean break between the colonial past of the constituent Member States of the EU, and the neocolonial present of the European project. This ongoing legacy can be seen in the ways in which the development of the EU’s social dimension, or ‘social regionalism’, influences and constrains the policy space available for another regionalism project, the African Union, to develop its own version of social regionalism.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025
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Chapter 6 Rethinking EU Social and Labour Law through Racial Capitalism

6.1 Introduction

In this chapter, I wish to consider the European Union (EU) integration project, and in particular the single market and the social/labour dimension of that market, through three frames of analysis: through the colonial lens with which this edited collection is preoccupied, in particular by reference to what has become known as ‘racial capitalism’; by taking into account the temporal and the spatial dimensions of EU integration; and, finally, with regard to the ways in which the development of the EU’s social dimension, or ‘social regionalism’, influences and constrains the policy space available to another regionalism project, namely the African Union (AU), to develop its own version of social regionalism.

The familiar accounts of the origins of the European integration project foreground the shared memory of the Second World War and the commitment to post-war reconstruction of Europe, in order to promote both peace and economic growth. Much less attention is paid to the other inheritance common to the EU Member States, that of empire, colonialism and decolonization. Yet, the EU integration project – and in particular the single market – owes much to what one might call the political economy of colonialism. My argument in this chapter is that the EU market integration project and the ability to embed that market in the ‘social’ are premised on the ‘racial capitalism’ of European colonial dominance over the territory and resources of other regions, on European responses to the process of decolonization and also, to a lesser extent, on the continuing neocolonialism of the relationship between the EU and the AU, between the regionalism projects of former colonizing and colonized states.

This chapter explores the temporal and spatial aspects of the emergence of regional (EU) social and labour law against the backdrop of decolonization: the moment (temporal aspect) of decolonization occurred simultaneously with, and I would argue was woven into, the EU market integration/market creation project, such that the boundaries (spatial aspect) of the single market were never simply the territorial boundaries of the six Member States. Occurring contemporaneously with the formation of the European Economic Community (EEC), the process of decolonization has resulted in an EU which is deemed to be postcolonial, however inaccurate it may be to assume that colonialism is wholly in the past.

A key contention of this chapter is that there has been no clean break between the colonial past of the constituent Member States of the EU and the neocolonial present of the European project: colonialism and empire are implicated in the version of capitalist modernity which the EU market-creating project represents, and enmeshed in the social dimension of that project. In pursuing this argument, I make use of the language of ‘racial capitalism’, one version of which contends that the emergence of capitalism was per se premised on global racialized inequalities, that race permeates the social structures emergent from capitalism. Further, as this chapter will explore, this colonialism has contemporary resonances and implications: in constructing the EEC, former colonial or imperial states created a sovereignty-pooling (market) integration project which enjoys largely asymmetrical ongoing trade relations with a regional integration project, the AU, comprising mainly former colonized states. Thus, European colonialism continues to reverberate, having a material impact on contemporary EU social and labour law; to shape EU–AU relations; and to determine the conditions of possibility for the evolution of a social dimension for the AU’s own market integration project.

6.2 Colonial Forgetfulness, Decolonization and EU Post-War Identity

March 1957 is a key moment in time, not only for the reasons already familiar to scholars of the EU. On 6 March, Ghana became the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to gain independence from (British) colonial rule, heralding a wave of independence by former colonies freeing themselves from rule by European states.Footnote 1 This was followed on 25 March by the signing of the Treaty of Rome, with narrative accounts emphasizing the technocratic and institution-building aspects of the new Communities, rather than any broader geopolitical ambitions.Footnote 2 Not surprisingly, therefore, a key assumption underpinning dominant understandings of the EU integration project is that colonialism and empire reside in the past, and were in any event an inheritance of the individual nation states, not attached to the EU project itself. This is a somewhat striking assertion, given the presence in the EEC Treaty of the express acknowledgement of Member States’ continuing colonial entanglements, in Part IV on ‘Association of the Overseas Countries and Territories’ (see later). Characterizing Member States as the ‘carriers’ of colonialism conveniently erases the fact of the significant economic role played by colonial extraction in the construction of the domestic economies and industries which subsequently served as the foundation for the common or single market.

One way to understand the colonial underpinnings of the EU is through close attention to the temporal and the spatial dimensions of EU integration. This could be through use of language and conceptual frameworks from the emergent field of legal geography, with its spatial awareness and focus on the way in which space, time and law are co-constituted.Footnote 3 Or by using the language of the ‘chronotope’, the literary device adapted for sociolegal scholars by Mariana Valverde,Footnote 4 which requires ‘that we consider how temporalization affects spatialization and vice versa’,Footnote 5 namely, that the temporal and the spatial dimensions of life and governance affect each other and should be analysed together. Taking the lead from Valverde, who takes pains to emphasize that chronotopes do not amount to a grand theory, or a world-scale theory, or a classification system,Footnote 6 I am interested in the simplest level of analysis which the language of legal geography or chronotopes inspires, to make sense of the relationship between colonialism and EU integration across time and space/geography. For instance, by means of the Treaty of Rome’s recognition of ‘overseas countries and territories’, locations (nations, even) outside the territorial continental boundaries of the EEC Member States became, juridically and constitutionally, part of the geographic reach of the new EEC.Footnote 7 In the meantime, decolonization struggles, such as the Algerian War of Independence (1954–1962),Footnote 8 meant the formal boundaries of the new European community, for instance with regard to the reach of the customs union, were subject to change,Footnote 9 once those overseas countries, territories, dependencies and settlements gained independence.Footnote 10 As Hanna Eklund has uncovered from a study of the archival material from the Treaty of Rome negotiations,Footnote 11 while the drafters of the treaty were well aware of anti-colonial sentiments and movements, not least of all as evidenced by the Suez Crisis, nevertheless the treaty itself was silent on the question of the legal implications of the acquisition of independence by the ‘overseas countries and territories’. It was only in 1967 that ‘[a]n oblique acknowledgement’ was made of the independence of several of the countries listed in Annex IV, in a two-page avis au lecteur, appended to the treaty.Footnote 12

Despite, or rather because of, the endeavours to ‘unite’ Europe and Africa in the ultimately unsuccessful ‘Eurafrica’ project (see later), the prehistory of the EU integration project is one marked by a distinct amnesia in relation to Europe’s colonial past.Footnote 13 Here, it is important to distinguish between acknowledgement of the colonial entanglements of the individual European nation states, which have been widely studied, and the rather under-theorized recognition that colonialism is a shared (Western) European experience,Footnote 14 one which significantly colours and shapes subsequent European integration. As Gurminder Bhambra observes, the assumption underpinning the EU project and self-understanding is that it is individual nation states, not the EU itself, which are the carriers of colonialism and responsible for its legacy. This is how she puts it: ‘The articulation of cosmopolitanism as a specifically European phenomenon rests on a particular understanding of European history that evades acknowledging European domination over much of the world as significant to that history. It also disavows examining the consequences of that domination for the contemporary multicultural constitution of European societies’.Footnote 15

It is, though, important to recognize that the EU today is a legacy from a period when many Western European states operated as empires,Footnote 16 and that European integration was in no insignificant part a response to the need to forge a new ‘European’ identity and regional role of global significance in the aftermath of decolonization.Footnote 17 Let’s unpack these two observations. First, the continuing colonial identity of Member States at the formal dawn of the EEC is exemplified most clearly in the recognition of ‘overseas countries and territories’ in the founding treaty framework,Footnote 18 with Belgium, France, Italy and the Netherlands entering the new Community with colonial holdings associated with though not integrated into the Community. More striking was the separate legal formulation conceived to deal with Algeria and the French overseas departments, which were constitutionally treated as parts of France and thus integrated into the Community, for instance being subject to treaty provisions such as those on free movement of goods and services though not to those on free movement of workers.Footnote 19

Second, it is necessary to interrogate the fact that EU integration was taking place against a backdrop of decolonization. While decolonization was not a primary motive for European integration, it was an important complement, previously overlooked. Europe’s global standing had already been shaken by world war, subsequently by Cold War and the creation of a bipolar world; and also crucially from the loss of hegemonic power which decolonization represented. This insight is neatly exemplified in the description of Nasser, president of Egypt, as ‘the Federator of Europe’; in other words, that the 1956 Suez Crisis served – among other things – as a strong argument in favour of European integration.Footnote 20

Indeed, as Peo Hansen and Stefan Jonsson argue, negotiations for integration were predicated on the very idea of bringing Africa as a ‘dowry to Europe’.Footnote 21 In other words, Africa’s natural resources – namely, land, labour and markets – were to be made available for the European project.Footnote 22 Hansen and Jonsson show how many of the projects seeking to institutionalize European cooperation, or even integration, up to and including the EEC, were premised on the assumption that Africa would be incorporated into this European project – the establishment of ‘Eurafrica’.Footnote 23 The justifications for Eurafrica were myriad: access to land, access to raw materials, access to markets for European products – in exchange for? Indeed, the former ‘civilising mission’ justifying European involvement in Africa was rebranded using the discourse of ‘development’ and human rights.Footnote 24 It is clear, though, that what was to be offered in the creation of Eurafrica was a partial form of belonging or integration for colonized peoples: to be included were the resources of the continent and the labour power of the inhabitants rather than the people themselves, given the absence of free movement for workers.Footnote 25 Having been formally recognized and encoded in a treaty which incorporated the colonial possessions of the founding Member States,Footnote 26 ‘Eurafrica’ has become what Hansen and Jonsson, drawing inspiration from Fredric Jameson, refer to as a ‘vanishing mediator’: the term disappears from the major narratives of European integration.Footnote 27 However, discontinuity at the level of discourse hides continuity at the level of economics, and obscures the fact that the colonialism in the relationship between Europe and Africa has arguably not been erased but merely shifted to the terrain of neocolonialism. According to Kwame Nkrumah, first post-independence president of Ghana, the Treaty of Rome and the creation of the EEC represented ‘the advent of neocolonialism in Africa’, or ‘collective colonialism’,Footnote 28 referring to neocolonialism not because the phenomenon was novel but indeed because it was a continuation or revived form of imperial domination, in particular economically, over nominally independent states.Footnote 29

For remarkably consistent perspectives on the colonial inheritance of the EU, vis-à-vis the Member States, it is instructive to consider the statements of European Commission presidents and high officials, spanning an almost fifty-year period. In 1975, president of the European Commission François-Xavier Ortoli observed that the Community was better placed to engage with the continent of Africa ‘because the European Communities in contrast to some member states were less contaminated by a colonial past’.Footnote 30 A later president of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, speaking in 2007, referred to the EU as ‘the first non-imperial empire’.Footnote 31 Such allusions to the EU as representing a more benign form of empire can, more recently, be seen in the October 2022 speech of EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Josep Borrell who claimed that ‘Europe is a garden’ whereas ‘[m]ost of the rest of the world is a jungle, and the jungle could invade the garden’.Footnote 32 These perspectives contrast markedly with the sentiments expressed by the European Parliament, in particular in its resolution of January 2024 on European historical consciousness.Footnote 33

6.3 Racial Capitalism and the Building of the EU Market Integration Project

Understanding how, as Hanna Eklund puts it, the structures of colonialism have shaped the EU legal order, requires a particular focus on the economic as well as the legal. To do so, I draw on the language of ‘racial capitalism’, which has gained prominence as a productive way to reconsider the relationship between law and political economy, historically and also in contemporary times. At their simplest, theories of racial capitalism contend that race and colonialism are deeply imbricated in the evolution of capitalism – with the emergence of capitalism predicated on global racialized inequalities, in particular Atlantic slavery; or, as Cedric Robinson would have it, with race permeating the social structures emergent from capitalism.Footnote 34 It is this structural analysis of race and political economy which is so compelling. Race or racism is in most legal accounts understood as individualized discrimination or prejudice. In contrast, I want to emphasize how race and racism operate at the level of social system, and also as a dominant rationality, to structure economic and societal institutions, for instance in relation to the aforementioned European colonial dominance over the territory and resources of other regions. As Rob Knox explains: ‘Capitalism was born in Europe, and spread and consolidated its hold over the globe on the basis of European colonialism and imperialism. In the process, European states fundamentally transformed the political-economic systems of non-European societies.’Footnote 35

As I have set out elsewhere,Footnote 36 the emerging tradition of economic sociology of law provides a helpful guide for conceptualizing, in a scalar manner, the economic and legal aspects of social life,Footnote 37 which are operating on four, mutually constitutive, levels: actions or actors, interactions, regimes and rationalities.Footnote 38 ‘Actions’ and ‘interactions’ is a useful way to understand how most race discrimination in employment is conceptualized within law, for example as prejudice between individuals or within institutions. Legislative enactment at EU (and national) level focuses on ‘less favourable treatment’ and ‘discrimination on grounds of racial or ethnic origin’,Footnote 39 suggesting that ‘race’ is conceived as a matter of demographic attributes. By this account, racism exists at the smallest level of social action and is the product of acts or beliefs of individuals or groups. However, the EU directive also acknowledges the role of institutions in racialized ordering – for example in the concept of indirect discrimination, wherein facially neutral organizational rules have a differential impact – suggesting that legal rules can contain a more complex understanding of inequality, as operating at the level of social action. Further, to the extent that there is an awareness in law and policy of systemic racism in labour markets, not solely discrimination at the level of an organization, this comes closer to the recognition that racism structures societal institutions, and that ‘race is inscribed and reinscribed in markets and other economic structures’.Footnote 40 As seen in the recognition of institutional racism, racism can be understood as a social regime, that is the broader culture that makes up society. The fourth level of analysis of society, economy and law turns to the rationalities behind a given regime or social order, such as modes of reasoning or ‘ways of apprehending the world’.Footnote 41 My interest in this exploration of the racial underpinnings of markets, is in the regimes and rationalities that constitute market society at large. Racism or racial capitalism is thus the dominant rationality, or way of seeing the world, which I argue underpins the market economy and the racialized inequality of the contemporary labour market.

A further insight of economic sociology (and economic sociology of law), in particular the Polanyi-inspired variant,Footnote 42 relates to the importance of state action and social relations as constitutive of markets, but also that markets may be constrained by or embedded within institutions – for instance, institutions of labour law, social citizenship or welfare states as ameliorative of the human consequences of market opening and trade liberalization.Footnote 43 My interest here is in the potential scope for that Polanyian ‘embeddedness’ to occur at the level of the region as well as at the level of the state; namely, how can we understand the scope of regional collective action to ameliorate markets. And in exploring the scope for regional integration with a social dimension in the EU and in the AU, one may see that such social regionalism in one region (the EU) may operate to constrain the evolution of social regionalism in another (the AU).

That the EU’s market-creation project was made possible by virtue of the ‘embedded liberal bargain’ is an argument I have pursued elsewhere,Footnote 44 but a further insight is that such social embedding, or social regionalism, was in turn made possible by virtue of colonial extraction – a racialized capitalism underpinning EU integration. The story of liberalism embedded at regional level, alongside the varying forms and depth of state or domestic intervention which John Ruggie had in mind,Footnote 45 has become a more familiar characterization of the EU project: EU economic integration shored up by a social community built on adjustment mechanisms at the national level, such as social regulations, social transfers and public infrastructure, as well as by a growing body of social law and policy at the EU level.Footnote 46 But the colonial turn in EU studies means that as scholars we should be more alert to the contemporary echoes of the imperial past of the EU and its Member States. In particular, I would argue, industrialized nation states of the global North were able to embed the market through social transfers and (varieties of) welfare state regimes. The ‘embedded liberalism’ which underpinned the redistributive capacities of these individual states and, in due course, underpinned the redistributive capacities of the EU integration project itself, was predicated on the transfer of value from the global South – hence constraining any subsequent development of that region’s own version of ‘social regionalism’. The pattern of exchange between the ‘core’ and the ‘periphery’, the extraction of raw commodities from the South and the commodification of the labour power of colonial states made possible the redistributive welfare states of the global North – and, crucially, facilitated the functioning of the single market through the embedding of EU market liberalization within institutions of social citizenship at domestic level. Historian Giuliano Garavini, writing in 2012, observes: ‘As developing nations in Asia and Africa became independent, they mainly came to be seen in western Europe as useful providers of labor and raw materials, potential outlets for surplus manufactures, junior partners to be preserved from the spread of international communism’.Footnote 47

This neocolonial approach by individual nation states which had been colonial empires predates their entry into the EEC,Footnote 48 but found continuation within the efforts to build the EEC internal market. The point I wish to make here is that European integration coexisted with empire, but also that there was no clean break with the colonial past of the constituent Member States. Formal independence has left these underlying inequalities unchallenged. As Chantal Thomas puts it: ‘The legal rules of the international economic order, though informed by liberal ideals of egalitarianism, perpetuate Northern economic hegemony by failing to address the entrenched economic inequality of the South resulting from the colonial era.’Footnote 49 A particularly striking example of the continuity of such economic hegemony is the colonial history of the CFA franc and its transition, as Kako Nubukpo traces, from being the currency of the ‘French Colonies of Africa’ to franc of the nominally independent ‘African Financial Community’.Footnote 50

Historically, African economies have been deeply integrated into the global economy; but the terms of that integration have been highly unfavourable to say the least. As Walter Rodney observes: ‘Africa helped to develop Western Europe in the same proportion as Western Europe helped to underdevelop Africa.’Footnote 51 Western European powers appropriated economic surplus from their colonies, and this materially and substantially aided their own industrial transition from the eighteenth century onward.Footnote 52 It is also important, though, to recognize the continuing significance of ‘colonial drain’ in the post-war construction of European markets, labour markets and hence of the single market.

Revisiting the embedded liberal bargain through the lens of racial capitalism highlights the interconnections between the colonial inheritance, social solidarity and varieties of welfare state and labour market institutions in EU Member States. The resources to be fought over between labour and capital in the metropole, the concessions won by workers against capital and the resultant redistribution which made possible the social welfare state and industrial citizenship of individual Member States owe a great deal – even after formal independence – to colonial drain from countries of the global South. This subsequently enabled the embedded liberal bargain of the EU social market project.

6.4 Colonial Extraction Abroad and Social ‘Solidarity’ at Home

To illustrate the colonial underpinnings of the embedded liberal bargain at EU level, it is helpful to track its underpinnings at domestic level. Here, there is a parallel effect between the EU level and what occurs in national systems of social citizenship. Given the significance of colonial extraction for the resourcing of the post-war welfare state and related labour market institutions in European states such as the UK, how inclusive was that welfare state settlement of racialized others – non-white colonial subjects migrating to work in the metropole? To what extent were there (racial) hierarchies within, or exclusions from, the post-war European ideal of the solidaristic social state?

In the UK, legislation passed in 1946–1948, implementing the Beveridge Report,Footnote 53 introduced a welfare system which formally eschewed the poor law-era distinction between the ‘deserving’ and the ‘undeserving’ poor,Footnote 54 in favour of a system premised on universality: such as tax-funded, redistributive social support and flat-rate benefits.Footnote 55 At the same time, the British Nationality Act 1948 ushered in the new legal status of ‘Citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies’,Footnote 56 which had the effect (if not the intention) of granting a right to enter and remain in the UK to all those born in the UK, in a British colony or in an independent Commonwealth state. Independent Commonwealth states in 1948 included Canada, New Zealand and the newly independent India and Pakistan.Footnote 57 Remaining British colonies at the time included territories and countries in Africa, Asia and the Caribbean, for instance, Kenya, Hong Kong, Jamaica. However, full access to the labour market and to the benefits of the welfare state were not in practice universally granted to racialized subjects.

The post-war welfare state was grounded on universality, but full belonging or citizenship required a particular type of participation in the labour market, and ideally within the primary labour market. Racialized and migrant workers in the UK, contracting for work under what we would now call atypical or non-standard terms and receiving lower hourly pay than British workers, would for instance be liable to pay lower social insurance contributions – and thus be disadvantaged when seeking to access welfare benefits in the event of unemployment, illness or accident.Footnote 58

More broadly, across Europe and North America, post-war welfare states failed to fully benefit women, racial minorities, guest workers or immigrants; or actively excluded them from education, healthcare, secure employment, housing support, government-backed financial services and pension schemes.Footnote 59 As Lionel Zevounou shows in the case of migrants from the former French colony of Morocco recruited to work in the SNCF (Société Nationale des Chemins de Fer Français (French National Railways)),Footnote 60 such unequal treatment in relation to pay, working conditions, promotion opportunities, pensions and other social benefits was typically rationalized as legitimate differentiation based on nationality, rather than understood as illegitimate discrimination based on race.Footnote 61 Crucially, the exclusion of racialized workers and colonial subjects is not merely an exclusion from the national welfare state and labour market institutions, but also from social citizenship within the EU – because that social citizenship within the EU is premised on these national institutions. This is because EU social citizenship is mainly marked by a privileging of market citizenship: individuals are rights-holders by virtue of their ability to operate as market participants (‘economically active’ citizens moving between welfare systems).Footnote 62 In limited circumstances, the personal scope of beneficiaries of Member States’ coordination duties is extended such that reciprocity and solidarity in welfare benefits applies also to non-economically active citizens moving between welfare systems. However, the development of the notion of ‘solidarity’, for instance in the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, has proved insufficient to further extend the development of social citizenship in such a way as to benefit legally resident third-country nationals. Indeed, the extent to which such solidarity is in fact available to all EU citizens resident in another Member State is now thrown into doubt. EU citizenship had been deemed to be of ‘fundamental status’ such that EU citizens lawfully resident in another Member State were entitled to social advantages (including welfare benefits) on the same terms as nationals.Footnote 63 However, in a line of case law over the past decade, the Court of Justice of the European Union has undertaken what Stefano Giubboni describes as ‘a spectacular retreat’ from the (admittedly weak) rhetoric of transnational solidarity which its earlier case law had extended to non-economically active EU citizens.Footnote 64 Thus, permitting exceptions and qualifications contained in secondary EU legislation (such as the Citizens’ Rights Directive 2004/38, OJ 2004 L 158, pp. 77–123) to dilute the ‘fundamental’ status of citizenship and EU citizens’ rights to equal treatment contained in primary EU law,Footnote 65 negates any aspiration towards ‘social Europe’: a social citizenship which excludes non-economically active citizens will also determinedly exclude third-country nationals.

Here is where we have a parallel effect between EU level and Member State level. Racialized workers and colonial subjects, even when no longer in the geographical periphery but having migrated to the global North and present in the geographic core, are excluded from national social citizenship, due to their location in the economic periphery of labour markets. As Karim Fertikh observes, this dual standard and racialized ‘hierarchy of belonging’, was a common template across many EEC states.Footnote 66 So in the same way that these workers are excluded from national institutions of social citizenship, ‘third country nationals’ as they are referred to in the context of the EU single market, are similarly excluded from ‘social Europe’. The hollowing out of ‘social Europe’ or social citizenship for EU nationals evidenced by the recent case law of the Court of Justice is in line with what Giubboni characterizes as the ‘neo-nationalistic and social-chauvinistic moods prevailing in Europe’,Footnote 67 which no longer accepts the value of ‘a certain degree of financial solidarity’ between EU Member States.Footnote 68 In similar vein, despite the funding of these national and EU redistributive social systems being premised on colonial extraction and the labour power from colonial states, financial or transnational solidarity beyond the territory of the EU is inconceivable.Footnote 69

6.5 Social Regionalism in the EU and the AU: The EU as a Neocolonial Project

One of the key projects with which labour and social law is concerned relates to constraining private market power, and a concern about the regulatory means by which the market can be governed. Historically, labour law, along with much economic law, has been a domestic project, ‘defined on the basis of a geographic territory or a synthetic community’.Footnote 70 Labour and social law scholarship has traditionally focused on the role of the state and its capacity, or otherwise, to regulate a territorially bounded market to socialize economic risk and uncertainty. But ‘labour’ is now provided, undertaken or commodified under conditions of trade liberalization; capital and the sphere of economic interaction are increasingly de-territorialized. Such increased cross-border economic activity places major demands on the ability of states to maintain (or instigate) regulatory control of economic activities within their borders. Given increased liberalization of trade and capital, one may ask, with Alain Supiot, whether the social state is still in a position to ‘prohibit the use of open borders to escape the duties of solidarity inherent in the recognition of economic and social rights’.Footnote 71 We may also need to ask whether, from the perspective of labour and social regulation, economic activity – in particular that which crosses national borders – can any longer be contained within or constrained by state regulation, and instead shift the focus to the attendant role of regulation on the regional or transnational plane.

In that light, and to return to the above discussion of economic sociology and ‘embedded liberalism’, Björn Hettne’s question becomes pertinent: ‘Is regionalisation an integral part of globalisation, or is it a political reaction against that process?’Footnote 72 In fact, as Hettne also concurs and as we have seen in the case of the EU, it can be both. For industrialized economies of the global North, including those in Europe, much of the protection of society from the market which Polanyi refers to as the countermovement or double movement,Footnote 73 occurred through the auspices of the social state. While regionalism and market liberalization do indeed undermine national regulatory autonomy over labour or social welfare law, the embedded liberal compromise, as the European integration project has exemplified, has in fact embedded the internal market within national social policy. Such embedding has been predicated on the ability of these industrialized nations to alleviate any adverse impact of market integration through national systems of employment protection and social welfare, and to fund social policy interventions, but shored up by the development of forms of social citizenship at EU level.Footnote 74

In exploring the scope for regional integration with a social dimension (social regionalism) in the EU and in the AU to re-embed the market or constrain the negative consequences of trade liberalization, one needs to trace the separate trajectories of these two regionalism projects; but also to recognize points of overlap, namely where one regionalism project (the EU) may constrain the policy space available to the other (the AU) to develop its own version of social regionalism. Nancy Fraser’s blunt observation that ‘the project of social protection can no longer be envisioned in the national frame’,Footnote 75 along with Supiot’s question whether the social state is ‘still’ able to protect economic and social rights, presupposes prior state capacity albeit now undermined by globalization. Yet developing economies of the global South, former EU colonies, never enjoyed protective capacities equal to those of ‘the core’ – thanks to ‘long histories of colonial subjection, as well as to the continuation, after independence, of imperialist predation by other means’.Footnote 76

To return to the observation in the introduction, what does it mean to say that EU colonialism continues to shape EU–AU relations, and to determine the conditions of possibility for the evolution of a social dimension for the AU’s own market integration project? What does it mean to take Polanyi to both Brussels and Addis Ababa, the homes of the EU Commission and AU Commission respectively? As discussed above, social regionalism in the EU context can be understood to entail a countermovement in the Polanyian sense – a regulatory response to protect vulnerable regions, sectors and workers from the impact of markets and trade liberalization, but writ large, beyond the single nation state. This involves integration which is both solidaristic and redistributive, conceiving of the adjustment costs of trade as more than a matter for domestic policy. But what policy space is there for a similar intervention or social regionalism within sub-Saharan Africa given that according to Nkrumah, the Treaty of Rome and the creation of the EEC represented ‘the advent of neocolonialism in Africa’Footnote 77 or ‘collective colonialism’.Footnote 78

The continent’s policy-makers, political elites and institutions (such as the AU Commission), drawing on and complementing the economic analyses of organizations such as the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), have come to a consensus around the need to pursue continent-wide trade liberalization in order to confer on African economies the economic power to engage meaningfully in global trade. But was this acceptance of the existing ‘rules of the game’ of the global economic order always the case? Was there scope or policy space for the form of regionalism which emerged from the Organisation of African Unity and the common project of decolonization to evolve into a form of African (social) regionalism which could serve as a countervailing force to neo-liberal global trade? The dominant model of regional integration on the continent today is one aimed at trade liberalization, integrating African states into the world economy and reducing the role of the state in the economy. This is most clearly exemplified through the establishment of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) which came into force in 2021,Footnote 79 and has been described as a ‘game changer’ for stimulating intra-African trade,Footnote 80 as well as enhancing integration of the region into the global economy.Footnote 81 To what extent is this regionalization process mirroring the market fundamentalism of existing global trade rules, or able to act as a buffer against them? I am interested in contrasting the market orientation acceptance of the neo-liberal paradigm of the current continental African regionalization project, with the earlier emphasis on the developmental state and state-led industrialization as an alternative economic strategy.

Early conceptions of regionalism on the continent of Africa were, in common with regionalist ideology in Latin America, Asia and among Arab countries, closely founded on aspirations for political unity and a common project of decolonization.Footnote 82 In postcolonial Africa, regionalism and integration arose alongside the emancipatory movement against racial (and economic) domination and the desire to integrate as a means to counter neocolonial legacies.Footnote 83 However, the radical version of pan-Africanism, as espoused by Nkrumah and other post-independence leaders in the early 1960s urging political integration and supranationalism as a prerequisite for economic integration, gave way to a more moderate version, seeking to strengthen respective states while promoting subregional communities.Footnote 84 This choice or tension between different forms of pan-Africanism and models of integration came to the fore in the immediate post-independence period, at the 1963 Addis Ababa summit which led to the formation of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU),Footnote 85 and again at the formation of the AU in 2000. As Daniel Bach argues, the OAU, the precursor to the AU, took its inspiration from the Organisation of American States. As such, the emphasis was on providing a multilateral forum. Thus the radical pan-African ideals of sovereignty pooling or supranationalism were sidelined in favour of ‘more immediate concerns related to sovereignty enhancement, non-interference in domestic affairs and mutual respect for colonial boundaries’,Footnote 86 and also in favour of further strengthening regional economic communities (RECs) before later continental integration.Footnote 87

The Constitutive Act of the African Union, adopted in July 2000, reflects the complexity of combining or balancing these aspirations towards both (national) independence and (regional) integration. Article 3, which articulates the objectives of the new Union, aims to ‘defend the sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of its Member States’; to ‘accelerate the political and socio-economic integration of the continent’; and also to ‘coordinate and harmonize the policies between the existing and future Regional Economic Communities’.Footnote 88 In contrast to the Preamble to the Treaty of Rome, which expresses a determination ‘to lay the foundations of an ever closer union among the peoples of Europe’ and then envisages that unity primarily in economic terms (referring to improvement of the living and working conditions, abolition of restrictions on international trade and a common commercial policy), the central inspirations underpinning the Preamble to the AU Constitutive Act are the ideals of pan-Africanism – unity, solidarity, but also the ‘heroic struggles waged by our peoples and our countries for political independence, human dignity and economic emancipation’. The model of integration ultimately adopted can be understood as a compromise ‘between partisans of a federal union (endowed with supranational competences) and those who resisted this ambitious vision and did not want to give up their national sovereignty’.Footnote 89

I now return to the contention that EU colonialism continues to shape EU–AU relations, and to determine the conditions of possibility for the evolution of a social dimension for the AU’s own market integration project. Against the backdrop of sometimes unpredictable geopolitical shifts which have affected global trade and politics,Footnote 90 AU–EU relations are described in terms of partnership, but not one between equals,Footnote 91 given the process of ‘unequal exchange’ which continues to bedevil postcolonial trade. There are two components to this characterization of colonial economy, developed by historians and economists associated with dependency theory and world-system theory.Footnote 92 First, that the wealth of high-income nations depends, on a vast scale, on processes of appropriation of natural resources and labour from the rest of the world, in particular from the global South during the colonial period.Footnote 93 More specifically, that ‘rich countries and monopolistic corporations leverage their geopolitical and commercial dominance in the world economy to depress or cheapen the prices of resources and labour in the global South, both at the level of whole national economies as well as within global commodity chains’.Footnote 94 The rules of global trade, and hence the ability to embed the market in the social, are thus weighted against formerly colonized states. Further, in respect of the scope to engage in ‘social regionalism’, this drain from the global South arguably remains a significant feature of the world economy and sustains high levels of income, redistribution and material consumption in ‘advanced economies’.Footnote 95

Second, that contemporary trade law, trade and development policies of international financial institutions and of global North governments have entrenched this unequal exchange. As summarized by Hickel and his co-authors, structural adjustment programmes imposed on the South by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, bilateral free trade agreements and the rules of a World Trade Organization (WTO) dominated by high-income nations have forced global South governments to remove tariffs, subsidies and other protections for infant industries, to cut public sector wages and employment, while rolling back labour rights and curtailing trade unions.Footnote 96

With regard to the EU–AU nexus, I wish to focus on the second, institutional part of the argument as to unequal exchange. In her 2023 State of the Union Speech, President of the EU Commission Ursula von der Leyen indicated that she and High Representative Josep Borrell would propose a ‘new approach’ to Africa during the upcoming EU–AU summit.Footnote 97 However, the current EU external relations and trade law framework reveals continuities in terms of ‘unequal exchange’ which are unlikely to be modified by any ‘new approach’. The current legal framework governing EU–Africa (i.e. broader than AU) relations is the Samoa Agreement with the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS), signed in November 2023.Footnote 98 This ‘post-Cotonou’ agreement evolved out of the Cotonou Partnership Agreement (CPA), signed in 1990 between the then European Community and African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) states, which had itself replaced the earlier Lomé Conventions, while retaining the core principle of non-reciprocal trade preferences first enshrined in the Lomé Convention of 1975.Footnote 99 As with the Lomé Conventions, the CPA was granted exemption from the most-favoured-nation obligation in Article I of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, in order to permit preferential treatment of ACP products within the narrow waiver allowed by the WTO.Footnote 100 Since the expiry of the WTO waiver in December 2007, trade relations between the ACP countries and the EU have been governed by a variety of legal instruments, including economic partnership agreements (EPAs) and the EU Generalised Scheme of Preferences, ‘replacing the more or less unified system of unilateral preferences under the Lomé Agreements with an array of tools’, fragmenting the ACP bloc into several subregional pieces for trade purposes.Footnote 101 The post-Cotonou partnership will arguably take this fragmentation further. Unlike the Lomé and Cotonou Agreements, which applied equally to all countries in the ACP regions without distinction, the new Samoa Agreement is made up of two parts: a General Part that applies to all OACPS countries (an umbrella agreement) and three region-specific protocols that apply only to the respective regions (regional protocols) – for instance, the Africa Regional Protocol.

While ostensibly committed to supporting intra-African trade, such as to generate tariff incomes of the sort to enable redistribution which could sustain social regionalism, the post-Cotonou partnership in practice operates to undermine African integration and intra-African trade. For instance: although the umbrella agreement commits signatory states to ‘intensifying regional integration efforts and processes within Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific and further encouraging intra-ACP regional trade’, and the Africa Regional Protocol commits the parties to ‘support regional and continental integration in Africa’ (Article 3 of the Africa Regional Protocol), including the AfCFTA, these efforts are undermined by the fact the post-Cotonou partnership also requires that ‘trade cooperation shall primarily build on existing preferential trade arrangements and Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs)’.Footnote 102 Prioritizing preferential trade agreements with the EU militates against the ability to deepen RECs and continent-wide integration – and undercuts the potential of the much-lauded AfCFTA to increase the value of intra-African trade. As Melaku Geboye Desta shows, EPAs have undermined some of the most promising regional integration projects in Africa, such as the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS, one of the regional economic communities on whose foundations the AfCFTA is to be built), given that countries such as Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire have had to conclude individual interim EPAs with the EU in order to preserve pre-existing market access – that is duty-free and quota-free access to the EU.Footnote 103 The estimates put forward by economists such as those at UNECA, that a single continental market would increase the value of intra-African trade by between 15 per cent (50 billion dollars) and 25 per cent (70 billion dollars) by 2040, due to the elimination of 90 per cent of tariffs on goods and the reduction of trade costs will not be realizable either for the continent-wide AfCFTA or for the RECs.Footnote 104 The adoption of bilateral special regimes by states which are members of the AU and also members of one of the AU’s RECs, in order to continue preferential trade with the EU, is incompatible with any common external tariff adopted by a REC such as ECOWAS.Footnote 105 The ability of EU goods to evade the ECOWAS common external tariff will lead to a loss of customs duties for ECOWAS, and a reduction in revenues for all ECOWAS states,Footnote 106 an outcome which is likely to be replicated on the larger, continental, stage of the AU’s attempts at market integration. The EU’s repeated assertion that EPAs and free trade agreements with the EU ‘should be exploited to the greatest extent, as building blocks to the benefit of the African Continental Free Trade Area’,Footnote 107 can only operate to undermine the AU’s goal for AfCFTA to create a single market for goods and services, such a single market being central to the continental market integration agenda but also an essential prerequisite for the continent’s development and social agenda.

6.6 Conclusion

This chapter has sought to highlight an absence in EU law scholarship, namely an analysis of the role of colonialism, race or racial capitalism in the process of EU integration. Addressing that lacuna requires us to develop an alternative analytical framework with which to understand the law in regionalism and market integration projects: one which recognizes colonialism as central to the historic construction of the welfare state in Europe, and draws attention to the transfers between South and North which made possible the ‘embedded liberalism’ of the EU social market project.

The value of the region is that in the case of the EU it has been able to serve as a complement and support to the social state weakened by the open borders of trade liberalization. However, the temporal, geographic and economic preconditions which enabled embedded liberalism or social regionalism in the EU to flourish do not apply in the case of the AU. First, the contemporary global trading order is less sympathetic to government intervention: the era of embedded liberalism has given way to one marked by disciplinary neo-liberalism. Second, the individual Member States themselves are less able to provide social stabilizers: developing states, and the regions they create, lack the policy space, institutional or economic capacity to moderate the harmful domestic effects of market exposure. Finally, in keeping with the main theme of this chapter and this collection, one needs to be attentive to the historic and contemporary relationship between the two regionalism projects. To return to Nkrumah’s observation on the Treaty of Rome, embedded liberalism in one region has consequences for the policy space available for the development of a social dimension elsewhere. The two regions are not only trading partners, but also share a colonial history which has an ongoing impact, with the embedded liberalism which underpinned the redistributive capacities of individual states of the North and the redistributive capacities of the EU integration project in large part predicated on the transfer of value from the global South, and the EU’s economic model potentially destabilizing the development of regional integration and redistributive social institutions in its developing-country trading partners.

Footnotes

I am very grateful to Hanna Eklund and the other participants in the Colonialism and the EU Legal Order conference for comments on earlier drafts. A version of the arguments in this chapter has appeared in a special issue of Transnational Legal Theory; I am very grateful to Ivana Isailović for her comments on this earlier paper. The usual disclaimer applies.

1 From the archive, ‘Hoisting the Flag of Ghana’, originally published in The Manchester Guardian, 6 March 1957. Seventeen sub-Saharan African states gained independence in 1960 alone, including Guinea, Cameroon, Senegal, Togo, Côte d’Ivoire (from France); Congo Kinshasa (from Belgium); Nigeria (from the United Kingdom).

2 European Commission Audiovisual Service, ‘Signing of the Treaties of Rome’, Date: 25 March 1957, Location: Rome, Campidoglio/Capitol: ‘This Treaty establishes the European Economic Community (EEC) and the European Atomic Energy Community (EAEC) and foresees the implementation of a customs union and the creation of institutions: the Commission, the Council, the Assembly and the Court of Justice of the EC.’

3 F. de Witte, ‘Here Be Dragons: Legal Geography and EU Law’ (2022) 1 European Law Open 11310.1017/elo.2021.2.

4 M. Valverde, Chronotopes of Law: Jurisdiction, Scale and Governance (London: Routledge, 2015)10.4324/9781315881614.

5 Valverde, Chronotopes of Law, p. 22.

6 Footnote Ibid., pp. 4–5 and 23.

7 Treaty of Rome (EEC) Treaty Establishing the European Economic Community 1957, Part IV, Articles 131–136 (Association of the Overseas Countries and Territories). Algeria and the French overseas departments are regulated separately, in Article 227, so as to confer special treatment in relation to, for example, free movement of goods, liberalization of services, rules relating to competition.

8 M. Brown, The Seventh Member State: Algeria, France and the European Community (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2022)10.2307/j.ctv2f1sm7w.

9 EEC Treaty, Part IV – The Association of Overseas Countries and Territories, Article 133(1): ‘Imports originating in the countries or territories shall, on their entry into Member States, benefit by the total abolition of customs duties which shall take place progressively between Member States in conformity with the provisions of this Treaty’.

10 For example, of the eight countries and territories listed as part of ‘French West Africa’ in Annex IV to the Treaty of Rome, to which the provisions of Part IV of the Treaty applied, the following six gained independence in the first three years of the EEC: Senegal (4 April 1960), French Guinea (2 October 1958), Côte d’Ivoire (7 August 1960), Mauritania (28 November 1960), Niger (3 August 1960), Republic of Dahomey (1 August 1960). See also F. Cooper, ‘Possibility and Constraint: African Independence in Historical Perspective’ (2008) 49 Journal of African History 16710.1017/S0021853708003915.

11 H. Eklund, ‘Peoples, Inhabitants and Workers: Colonialism in the Treaty of Rome’ (2023) 34 European Journal of International Law 83110.1093/ejil/chad060.

12 Footnote Ibid., 12.

13 P. Pasture, ‘The EC/EU between the Art of Forgetting and the Palimpsest of Empire’ (2018) 26 European Review 545.

14 P. Hansen, ‘European Integration, European Identity and the Colonial Connection’ (2002) 5 European Journal of Social Theory 483498 at 48510.1177/136843102760513875.

15 G. K. Bhambra, ‘Whither Europe? Postcolonial versus Neocolonial Cosmopolitanism’ (2016) 18 Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 187202 at 19310.1080/1369801X.2015.1106964.

16 P. Hansen and S. Jonsson, ‘Imperial Origins of European Integration and the Case of Eurafrica: A Reply to Gary Marks’ “Europe and Its Empires”’ (2012) 50 Journal of Common Market Studies 10281041 at 103210.1111/j.1468-5965.2012.02282.x.

17 S. R. Larsen, ‘European Public Law after Empires’ (2022) 1 European Law Open 625 at 1610.1017/elo.2021.8; ‘[I]f decolonisation was the product of imperial decline in the former colonies, European integration was part of the response to imperial decline in the metropoles’, Footnote Ibid. at 24.

18 Treaty of Rome 1957, Part IV, Articles 131–136 (Association of the Overseas Countries and Territories).

19 Treaty of Rome 1957, Article 227. As P. Hansen observes, the self-mythologizing notion of European integration as a symbol of peace requires reassessment given the continuation of war; in this case, the Algerian War 1955–1962 which spanned the signature of the Treaty of Rome in 1957, Hansen, ‘European Integration’, 487–488. See the important contribution offered by M. Brown in The Seventh Member State.

20 Hansen, ‘European Integration’, 491–492. Suez also arguably, though less directly, led to British reappraisal of the benefits of integration: it was the beginning of the realization that the Commonwealth (an association of states comprising the UK and its former colonies) would not provide sufficient replacement to empire in terms of trade and global dominance, but the Common Market could indeed offer a substitute – not just in terms of trade and global status, but also in terms of the identity of being part of the ‘communal European civilizing mission’, Hansen, ‘European Integration’, 494.

21 P. Hansen and S. Jonsson, ‘Bringing Africa as a “Dowry to Europe”’ (2011) 13 Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 44310.1080/1369801X.2011.597600.

22 Hansen, ‘European Integration’; P. Hansen and S. Jonsson, ‘Eurafrica Incognita: The Colonial Origins of the European Union’ (2017) 7 History of the Present: A Journal of Critical History 110.5406/historypresent.7.1.0001; N. El-Enany, (B)ordering Britain: Law, Race and Empire (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020), pp. 18318910.7765/9781526145437.

23 P. Hansen and S. Jonsson, Eurafrica: The Untold History of European Integration and Colonialism (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014)10.5040/9781472544506.

24 Pasture, ‘The EC/EU between the Art of Forgetting’, 547.

25 Eklund, ‘Peoples, Inhabitants and Workers’, 833: ‘People who were not considered ethnically and racially Europeans, but who were subjected to, or were indeed citizens of, a member state through colonialism, were excluded from legal benefits and equal political representation.’

26 For one example of the continuation of colonial preferences, even after independence, see V. Dimier, The Invention of a European Development Aid Bureaucracy: Recycling Empire (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014)10.1057/9781137318275. Dimier argues how, through the establishment of the European Commission’s Directorate-General for International Cooperation and Development and the European Development Fund, the EEC’s development aid programme served as a vehicle for the pursuit of interests of donor countries, in particular France, for instance in the preferential access given to French consultancy firms providing technical assistance to newly independent African states devising development projects.

27 Hansen and Jonsson, ‘Eurafrica Incognita’; Pasture, ‘The EC/EU between the Art of Forgetting’, 551. On the ‘remarkably thorough erasure of Algeria’s EEC history from both European lore and scholarship until now’, see Brown, The Seventh Member State, p. 16.

28 K. Nkrumah, ‘Address to the Ghana National Assembly, 30 May 1961’ quoted in G. Martin, ‘Africa and the Ideology of Eurafrica: Neo-Colonialism or Pan-Africanism?’ (1982) 20:2 The Journal of Modern African Studies 221238 at 22910.1017/S0022278X00024459.

29 ‘The essence of neo-colonialism is that the State which is subject to it is, in theory, independent and has all the outward trappings of international sovereignty. In reality its economic system and thus its political policy is directed from outside’: K. Nkrumah, Neo-Colonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism (London: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1965), p. 4.

30 Speech, François-Xavier Ortoli, European Parliament, Strasbourg, 18 February 1975 and De Cerexhe, Pourquoi l’Europe?, 17 July 1975 (ALT 614); quoted in Pasture, ‘The EC/EU between the Art of Forgetting’, p. 561.

31 José Manuel Barroso, Strasbourg, 10 July 2007: in response to a question about the nature of the EU, Barroso replied that it is not a super state, a ‘United States of Europe’, neither is it an international organization such as the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe or Council of Europe. Rather, the EU is a unique creation which he contrasts to empires made through force. Instead, the EU is the world’s first ‘non-imperial empire’. Speech and link referred to in Pasture, ‘The EC/EU between the Art of Forgetting’, 562.

32 European External Action Service (EEAS) Press Team, ‘European Diplomatic Academy: Opening remarks by High Representative Josep Borrell at the inauguration of the pilot programme’, 13 October 2022.

33 ‘The European Parliament … acknowledges the crimes committed by Nazi, fascist and communist totalitarian regimes as well as under colonialism, and the role these crimes have played in shaping historical perceptions in Europe’: European Parliament resolution of 17 January 2024 on European historical consciousness (2023/2112(INI)), P9_TA(2024)0030. See also European Parliament, Report on European historical consciousness (2023/2112(INI)), A9-0402/2023, Committee on Culture and Education.

34 C. Robinson, Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000), p. 2; S. Beckert and S. Rockman,‘Introduction: Slavery’s Capitalism’ in S. Beckert and S. Rockman (eds.), Slavery’s Capitalism: A New History of American Economic Development (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016), p. 2710.9783/9780812293098; see also C. G. Gonzalez and A. D. Mutua, ‘Mapping Racial Capitalism: Implications for Law’ (2022) 2 Journal of Law and Political Economy 127.

35 R. Knox, ‘International Law, Race, and Capitalism: A Marxist Perspective’ (2023) 117 AJIL Unbound 5510.1017/aju.2023.5.

36 D. Ashiagbor, ‘Race and Colonialism in the Construction of Labour Markets and Precarity’ (2021) 50 Industrial Law Journal 50610.1093/indlaw/dwab020.

37 D. Ashiagbor, P. Kotiswaran and A. Perry-Kessaris, ‘Introduction: Moving towards an Economic Sociology of Law’ (2013) 40 Journal of Law and Society 110.1111/j.1467-6478.2013.00609.x. Economic sociology of law entails applying sociological approaches (analytical, normative, empirical) to investigate relationships between law and economy, as both a theoretical framework and a methodological approach.

38 S. Frerichs, ‘Re-embedding Neo-liberal Constitutionalism: A Polanyian Case for the Economic Sociology of Law’ in C. Joerges and J. Falke (eds.), Karl Polanyi, Globalisation and the Potential of Law in Transnational Markets (Oxford: Hart, 2011), pp. 6584; A. Perry-Kessaris, ‘Approaching the Econo-socio-legal’ (2015) 11 Annual Review of Law & Social Science 5774 at 5910.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-120814-121542: ‘Like all typologies, this one is idealized and should be treated not as a map of social life but rather as a device for clear thinking and communicating about social life. Furthermore, these levels are mutually constitutive.’

39 Council Directive 2000/43/EC of 29 June 2000 implementing the principle of equal treatment between persons irrespective of racial or ethnic origin OJ 2000 L 180/22. See also Council Directive 2000/78/EC of 27 November 2000 establishing a general framework for equal treatment in employment and occupation OJ 2000 L 303/16.

40 D. Hirschman and L. Garbes, ‘Toward an Economic Sociology of Race’ (2021) 19 Socio-Economic Review 117110.1093/ser/mwz054.

41 D. Ashiagbor, P. Kotiswaran and A. Perry-Kessaris, ‘Introduction’, 60.

42 Frerichs, ‘Re-embedding Neo-liberal Constitutionalism’, p. 65; D. Ashiagbor, P. Kotiswaran and A. Perry-Kessaris (eds.), ‘Special Issue: Towards an Economic Sociology of Law’ (2013) 40 Journal of Law & Society 110.1111/j.1467-6478.2013.00609.x. For a more Weberian-inspired economic sociology of law, see R. Dukes, ‘The Economic Sociology of Labour Law’ (2019) 46 Journal of Law and Society 39610.1111/jols.12168.

43 K. Polanyi, The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time (Massachusetts: Beacon Press, 2001). What Polanyi refers to as the ‘double movement’ or ‘counter movement’ relates to a political, regulatory response to the spread of markets, to the commodification of labour power and of land (the environment). The forces of laissez-faire economic liberalism are offset by principles of social protection: Polanyi, The Great Transformation, pp. 79–80, 136 and 138–139.

44 D. Ashiagbor, ‘Unravelling the Embedded Liberal Bargain: Labour and Social Welfare Law in the Context of EU Market Integration’ (2013) 19 European Law Journal 30310.1111/eulj.12025.

45 J. Ruggie, ‘International Regimes, Transactions, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Post-War Economic Order’ (1982) 36 International Organization 37910.1017/S0020818300018993.

46 Ashiagbor, ‘Unravelling the Embedded Liberal Bargain’, at 307 onwards.

47 G. Garavini, After Empires: European Integration, Decolonization and the Challenge from the Global South 1957–1986 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), p. 46.

48 N. J. White, ‘Reconstructing Europe through Rejuvenating Empire: The British, French, and Dutch Experiences Compared’ (2011) 210 Past and Present, Supplement 6, 21110.1093/pastj/gtq048 (also published in M. Mazower, J. Reinisch and D. Feldman (eds.), Post-War Reconstruction in Europe: International Perspectives, 1945–1949 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011)).

49 C. Thomas, ‘Causes of Inequality in the International Economic Order: Critical Race Theory and Postcolonial Development’ (1999) 9 Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 1.

50 K. Nubukpo, Chapter 7 of this volume.

51 W. Rodney, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (New York: Verso, 2018), p. 86. See G. K. Bhambra, ‘Colonial Global Economy: Towards a Theoretical Reorientation of Political Economy’(2021) 28 Review of International Political Economy 307322 at 313.

52 U. Patnaik and P. Patnaik, ‘The Drain of Wealth Colonialism before the First World War’ (2021) 72 Monthly Review 119.10.14452/MR-072-09-2021-02_1

53 ‘Social Insurance and Allied Services. Report by Sir William Beveridge’ (London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1942). Implementing legislation comprised the National Insurance Act 1946; the National Health Service Act 1946, which came into force in 1948; and the National Assistance Act 1948.

54 S. Deakin and F. Wilkinson trace the ‘many continuities’ from the original Elizabethan (sixteenth century) poor laws to contemporary social security. A key turning point was the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, with its aim of deterring claims for relief so as to ‘avoid “artificial” interference with the market rate for wages’: S. Deakin and F. Wilkinson, The Law of the Labour Market: Industrialization, Employment and Legal Evolution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 11110.1093/acprof:oso/9780198152811.001.0001; see generally chapter 3. Subsequently in the early twentieth century, the practice of requiring the ‘undeserving’ able-bodied poor to be incarcerated in workhouses in order to obtain relief, was abandoned in favour of means-tested assistance – cheaper than organizing relief through the workhouse but still stigmatized and discouraged. The Beveridgean welfare state for the most part abolished means-testing: N. Whiteside, ‘The Beveridge Report and Its Implementation: A Revolutionary Project?’ (2014) 24 Histoire@Politique. Politique, culture, société 2410.3917/hp.024.0024.

55 Whiteside, ‘The Beveridge Report and Its Implementation’, 24.

56 M. Dias-Abey, ‘Determining the Impact of Migration on Labour Markets: The Mediating Role of Legal Institutions’ (2021) 50 Industrial Law Journal 53210.1093/indlaw/dwab030.

57 The full list comprised Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, Newfoundland, India, Pakistan, Southern Rhodesia and Ceylon: British Nationality Act 1948 s. 1(3). Citizens of Eire (Republic of Ireland) were in a special category, in most circumstances to be treated as British subjects.

58 F. Williams, Social Policy: A Critical Introduction: Issues of Race, Gender, and Class (London: Polity Press, 1987), p. 7; M. O’Brien, ‘The Beveridge Report: Its Impact on Women and Migrants’ (2010) 2 Socheolas: Limerick Student Journal of Sociology 21 at 33.

59 P. Paidipaty and P. Ramos Pinto, ‘Revisiting the “Great Levelling”: The limits of Piketty’s Capital and Ideology for Understanding the Rise of Late 20th Century Inequality’ (2021) 72 British Journal of Sociology 5268 at 5610.1111/1468-4446.12840.

60 L. Zevounou, Chapter 5 of this volume.

61 Footnote Ibid. See also European Commission, European network of legal experts in gender equality and non-discrimination, Country Report, Non-discrimination: Transposition and Implementation at National Level of Council Directives 2000/43 and 2000/78. France. Reporting period 1 January 2022 – 1 January 2023 (Sophie Latraverse). Available at: www.equalitylaw.eu/downloads/5937-france-country-report-non-discrimination-2023.

62 M. Everson, ‘The Legacy of the Market Citizen’ in J. Shaw and G. More (eds.), New Legal Dynamics of European Union (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995), p. 73; N. N. Shuibhne, ‘The Resilience of EU Market Citizenship’ (2010) 47 Common Market Law Review 159710.54648/COLA2010068.

63 Case C-184/99, Rudy Grzelczyk, EU:C:2001:458. See also Case C-85/96, María Martínez Sala, EU:C:1998:217; Case C-456/02, Michel Trojani, EU:C:2004:488; Case C-413/99, Baumbast, EU:C:2002:493; Case C-34/09, Gerardo Ruiz Zambrano, EU:C:2011:124.

64 S. Giubboni, ‘Free Movement of Persons and European Solidarity Revisited (2015) 7 Perspectives on Federalism 318.10.1515/pof-2015-0016

65 Case C-140/12, Peter Brey, EU:C:2013:565; Case C-333/13, Dano, EU:C:2014:2358; Case C-67/14, Alimanovic, EU:C:2015:597; Case C-299/14, García-Nieto, EU:C:2016:114; Case C-308/14, Commission v. UK, EU:C:2016:436.

66 K. Fertikh, Chapter 4 of this volume.

67 Giubboni, ‘Free Movement of Persons’.

68 Grzelczyk, para. 44.

69 T. de Lange, W. Maas and A. Schrauwen (eds.), Money Matters in Migration: Policy, Participation and Citizenship (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021)10.1017/9781009042505.

70 G. Mundlak, ‘De-Territorializing Labor Law’ (2009) 3 Law & Ethics of Human Rights 18910.2202/1938-2545.1037.

71 A. Supiot, ‘Grandeur and Misery of the Social State’ (2013) 82 New Left Review 9910.64590/3us.

72 B. Hettne, ‘Beyond the “New” Regionalism’ (2005) 10 New Political Economy 543571 at 54710.1080/13563460500344484.

73 Polanyi, The Great Transformation: ‘For a century the dynamics of modern society was governed by a double movement: the market expanded continuously but this movement was met by a countermovement checking the expansion in definite directions’, at p. 130.

74 Ashiagbor, ‘Unravelling the Embedded Liberal Bargain’.

75 N. Fraser, ‘A Triple Movement? Parsing the Politics of Crisis after Polanyi’ (2013) 81 New Left Review 11910.64590/6vs.

77 Nkrumah, ‘Address to the Ghana National Assembly, 30 May 1961’, 229.

78 K. Nkrumah, ‘Step to Freedom’ Address to the Nationalist Conference of African Freedom Fighters, 4 June 1962; quoted in S. K. B. Asante, ‘Pan-Africanism and Regional Integration’ in A. A. Mazrui (ed.), General History of Africa VIII: Africa since 1935 (Oxford: Heinemann, 1993), p. 740.

79 Agreement Establishing the African Continental Free Trade Area, 21 March 2018, available at: https://au-afcfta.org/afcfta-legal-texts/.

80 UNECA estimates that the AfCFTA will increase the value of intra-African trade by between 15 per cent (50 billion dollars) and 25 per cent (70 billion dollars) by 2040, due to the elimination of 90 per cent of tariffs on goods and the reduction of trade costs – compared to the absence of such a single continental market: UNECA, ‘An Empirical Assessment of the African Continental Free Trade Area Modalities on Goods’ (November 2018), at 3.

81 H. Fofack and A. Mold, ‘The AfCFTA and African Trade: An Introduction to the Special Issue’ (2021) 8 Journal of African Trade 110.2991/jat.k.211206.001.

82 D. Bach, ‘The Global Politics of Regionalism: Africa’ in M. Farrell, B. Hettne and L. Van Langenhove (eds.), Global Politics of Regionalism: Theory and Practice (London: Pluto Press, 2005), p. 174; E. T. Aniche, ‘Pan-Africanism and Regionalism in Africa: The Journey So Far’ in S. O. Oloruntoba (ed.), Pan Africanism, Regional Integration and Development in Africa (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020), pp. 1738.10.1007/978-3-030-34296-8_2

83 L. G. Dirar, ‘Rethinking and Theorizing Regional Integration in Southern Africa’ (2014) 28 Emory International Law Review 123165 at 165.

84 A. S. Basiru, M. L. A. Salawu and A. Adepoju, ‘Radical Pan-Africanism and Africa’s Integration: A Retrospective Exploration and Prospective Prognosis’ (2018) 41 Ufahamu: A Journal of African Studies 103, esp. 110–11210.5070/F7411042306; K. Nkrumah, Africa Must Unite (New York: Frederic A. Praeger, Inc., 1963).

85 Organisation of African Unity (OAU) Charter, Addis Ababa, 25 May 1963. Prior to the foundation of the OAU, states had divided between those which favoured political integration as a prerequisite for economic integration (representatives of Ghana, Guinea, Mali, Morocco, Libya, Egypt, and the Algerian Provisional Government – signatories of the 1961 Casablanca Charter) and the ‘Monrovia group’ (including representatives of Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone) which favoured a more gradualist approach to integration: Basiru, Salawu, and Adepoju, ‘Radical Pan-Africanism’.

86 Bach, ‘The Global Politics of Regionalism’, p. 174.

87 Basiru, Salawu and Adepoju, ‘Radical Pan-Africanism’.

88 Constitutive Act of the African Union; adopted at the Lomé Summit (Togo) 11 July 2000, entered into force 26 May 2001.

89 G. Laporte and J. Mackie, ‘Towards a Strong African Union: What Are the Next Steps and What Role Can the EU Play?’ in G. Laporte and J. Mackie (eds.), Building the African Union: An Assessment of Past Progress and Future Prospects for the African Union’s Institutional Architecture, European Centre for Development Policy Management (ECDPM) Policy and Management Report 18 (Maastricht: ECDPM, October 2010), p. 15.

90 L. T. Shiferaw and M. Di Ciommo, ‘Trouble in Paradise: The EU-Africa Partnership in a Geopolitical Context’, ECDPM Briefing Note No. 172, 13 November 2023.

91 S. Islam, ‘Decolonising EU-Africa Relations is a Pre-condition for a True Partnership of Equals’, Center for Global Development Blog Post, 15 February 2022.

92 Rodney, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa; R. Prebisch, ‘The Economic Development of Latin America and Its Principal Problems’ (1950) United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America; also published in (1962) 7 Economic Bulletin for Latin America 1; I. Wallerstein, The Modern World-System: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in the Sixteenth Century (New York: Academic Press, 1974); S. Amin, Unequal Development: An Essay on the Social Formations of Peripheral Capitalism (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1976).

93 J. Hickel, D. Sullivan and H. Zoomkawala, ‘Plunder in the Post-Colonial Era: Quantifying Drain from the Global South through Unequal Exchange, 1960–2018’ (2021) 26 New Political Economy 10301047 at 103010.1080/13563467.2021.1899153.

94 J. Hickel, C. Dorninger, H. Wieland and I. Suwandi, ‘Imperialist Appropriation in the World Economy: Drain from the Global South through Unequal Exchange, 1990–2015’ (2022) 73 Global Environmental Change 110.1016/j.gloenvcha.2022.102467.

95 Hickel, Sullivan and Zoomkawala, ‘Plunder in the Post-Colonial Era’, at 1042–1043.

96 Footnote Ibid. at 1032; Hickel, Dorninger, Wieland and Suwandi, ‘Imperialist Appropriation in the World Economy’, at 9.

97 2023 State of the Union Address by President von der Leyen, 13 September 2023, Strasbourg: Commission work programme 2024: Delivering today and preparing for tomorrow, Strasbourg, 17 October 2023, COM(2023) 638 final, ANNEXES 1 to 4. A joint communication between the European Commission and EEAS on this ‘new approach’ was published in late 2024: High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Joint Communication to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee, the Committee of the Regions and the European Investment Bank: Building sustainable international partnerships as a Team Europe, Brussels, 2 October 2024, JOIN(2024) 25 final.

98 Council Decision 2023/2861 of 20 July 2023 on the signing, on behalf of the European Union, and provisional application of the Partnership Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part, and the Members of the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States, of the other part, OJ 2023 L 2023/2861. For the text of the post-Cotonou partnership Samoa Agreement: Council of the European Union, Partnership Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part, and the Members of the Organisation of the African, Caribbean and Pacific States, of the other part, Brussels, 19 July 2023, (OR. en) 8372/1/23 REV 1.

99 M. Cremona and V. Dimier in Chapters 2 and 10 of this volume; L. Bartels, ‘The Trade and Development Policy of the European Union’ (2007) 18 European Journal of International Law 71510.1093/ejil/chm042.

100 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT 1947) Article I: General Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment, Article XXXVI Trade and Development: the ‘Enabling Clause’ allows for a General System of Preferences in favour of developing countries, which otherwise would violate Most Favoured Nation. See also Bartels, ‘The Trade and Development Policy’.

101 M. G. Desta, ‘The Normative Mess Governing Africa-EU Trade Relation Granted a New Lease of Life: Preliminary Reflections on the Trade-Related Aspects of the Negotiated Agreement between the EU and OACPS’, Völkerrechtsblog, 16 November 2021.

102 Article 16(3) of the Africa Regional Protocol, Council of the European Union, Partnership Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part, and the Members of the Organisation of the African, Caribbean and Pacific States, of the other part, Brussels, 19 July 2023, (OR. en) 8372/1/23 REV 1.

103 Desta, ‘The Normative Mess Governing Africa-EU Trade’.

104 UNECA, ‘An Empirical Assessment’.

105 ECOWAS Trade Information System, ECOWAS Common External Tariff (CET), https://ecotis.ecowas.int/policy-development/common-external-tariff-cet/.

106 J. Berthelot, ‘The ECOWAS Trade Liberalization Scheme (ETLS) Undermined by the Interim EPAs (iEPAs) of Ivory Coast and Ghana’, Bilaterals (27 November 2016); J. MacLeod, J. E. von Uexkull and L. Shui, ‘Assessing the Economic Impact of the ECOWAS CET and Economic Partnership Agreement on Ghana’, World Bank Group Working Paper, 1 January 2015.

107 European Commission, Communication on a new Africa – Europe Alliance for Sustainable Investment and Jobs: Taking our partnership for investment and jobs to the next level, Brussels, 12 September 2018, COM(2018) 643 final, at Action #8 at 11.

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