A key part of the Brexit negotiations is the border between Northern Ireland and Éire (Ireland).
The Irish backstop is described as an attempt to avoid a border between north and south, but a border will be an area of great political security for Ireland. The British are fiecely opposed to a border on the island of Ireland and have taken measures to try to ensure there will be no border. Why is this issue such an imperative?
A hard border, in the context of Ireland, might be described as one where there is a limited number of authorised crossing points staffed by customs officers. Border control would mean the passage of drugs and other detrimental substances could be monitored, as can travellers from one province to another. Passports as necessary ID would help Gardai keep track and might also be useful to hotels, which has been normal procedure in other countries such as Spain. In this way, a border would demark areas of responsibility and set the tone for friendlier relations.
External European Union frontiers are all hard borders under different trade and customs regimes. The border between Sweden and Norway for instance, has no passport control due to the schengen treaty but this hasn’t been popular with all parties. The two organisations concerning trade are the European single market which used to be the Common market and the customs union where imports and exports are controlled, taxes and duties are reduced and subsidies and sanctions can be applied. Sanctions cause a a lot of poverty and hardship and shouldn’t be applied subjectively.