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Asymmetric Regulatory Embeddedness and Post‐Brexit Governance: Explaining Adaptive Convergence in the United Kingdom

Abstract:
Why has the United Kingdom repeatedly restored substantive compatibility with European Union (EU) regulatory norms despite formal withdrawal? This article introduces the concept of asymmetric regulatory embeddedness (ARE) to explain post‐membership governance in highly integrated sectors. ARE captures the structural condition in which a former member state remains economically, institutionally and infrastructurally embedded within a dominant regulatory ecosystem, resulting in bounded autonomy after legal exit. The article theorises adaptive convergence as the mechanism through which divergence initiatives confront embeddedness‐induced constraints and are incrementally recalibrated. Drawing on process tracing and discourse analysis of UK Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) and sanitary and phytosanitary/pesticide governance (2019–2025), the study shows how market interdependence, epistemic infrastructure dependence, institutional path dependence and legitimacy pressures produce functional compatibility without formal obligation. The findings extend Europeanisation beyond hierarchical membership, conceptualising EU influence as structural and relational rather than coercive. It provides a dynamic framework for analysing regulatory governance under conditions of post‐membership interdependence.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1111/jcms.70130

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-2986-8570


Publisher:
Wiley
Journal:
Journal of Common Market Studies More from this journal
Article number:
jcms.70130
Publication date:
2026-05-27
Acceptance date:
2026-04-26
DOI:
EISSN:
1468-5965
ISSN:
0021-9886


Language:
English
Keywords:
Source identifiers:
4089402
Deposit date:
2026-05-28
ARK identifier:
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