The cutting-edge contributions to this book analyse different facets of the European Union (EU): closer integration among the member states, policymaking within a ‘normal’ political system, and the implications of European integration for its member states. This book also considers whether the challenges currently confronting the EU – the lingering Eurozone debt crises, the migrant/refugee crisis, the British decision to leave the EU, and terrorist attacks in Belgium, France and Germany – mark an inflection point for the Union and for the study of the EU. For the first time, ‘less Europe’, rather than closer integration, has emerged as a serious option in response to crisis. This possibility reignites questions of (dis)integration and calls into question the assumption of the EU as a ‘normal’ political system. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public Policy.
Young
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Weitere Infos & Material
An inflection point in European Union studies? Mapping European law Free movement and EU citizenship: a virtuous circle? Policy leadership and re-election in the European Parliament Does the European Union have a reverse gear? Policy dismantling in a hyperconsensual polity Coming full circle? Differential empowerment in Croatia’s EU accession process Winning the battle or losing the war: the impact of European integration on labour market institutions in Germany and Denmark The minimum wage in Germany: what brought the state in?
Alasdair R. Young is a Professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Co-Director of the Center for European and Transatlantic Studies, a Jean Monnet Center of Excellence. He is the chair of the European Union Studies Association (USA) (2015-2017).