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E-grāmata: In Defence of Europe: Can the European Project Be Saved?

4.27/5 (23 ratings by Goodreads)
(Professor of European Integration)
  • Formāts: 280 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191071225
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  • Formāts: 280 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191071225

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Buffeted by a successon of crises, Europe has not been so weak and so divided for a long time. In these troubled times for both Europe and the European idea, can the continent hold together? And, if so, under what terms - and for what purpose?

Europe has not been so weak and divided for a long time. Buffeted by a succession of crises, its collective capacity to deliver has been truly disappointing. In times when the tectonic plates are shifting and tension between global markets and national democracies is rising, can Europe hold together, under what terms - and indeed for what purpose?

The euro crisis has left big scars and is still far from over. The contradiction of a currency without a state will not be easy to resolve. And the combination of high debt with persistently slow growth, large numbers of unemployed in many parts of Europe, and inflation close to zero is hardly reassuring. Meanwhile, economic divergence has grown between and within countries, leading in turn to political fragmentation and the rise of populism.

Europe is in a bind: it is difficult to go forwards and scary to go backwards. In between, it is in an unhappy and unstable state of affairs. How can it accommodate such diversity - and hence prevent Grexit and Brexit? And, looking further afield, a more assertive Russia and a troubled wider neighbourhood exporting millions of refugees may not even allow Europe the luxury to decline in grace.

Drawing lessons from the European success story of the second half of the twentieth century, political economist and former special adviser to the President of European Commission Loukas Tsoukalis now addresses the key choices facing Europe today. He explains how the international financial crisis of recent years has become an existential crisis of European integration. And he asks whether there is an irreconcilable contradiction between Europe's apparent yearning for soft power and the often hard reality of the world outside.

Recenzijas

This volume by a leading scholar of European integration could not be timelier... The analysis of the political, economic and social causes and consequences of the crisis is sharp and all of the key factors are identified and discussed. [ It] does not shy away from the big questions of integration. This is one of the great strengths of the volume ... [ that] finds its roots in an older literature on the EU that sought to understand the nature of the beast. * Brigid Laffan, Director of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, European University Institute, Florence in Journal of Common Market Studies * An inexorable analysis. An eye opener, a heart cry from a true European. * Herman van Rompuy, former President of the European Council * A deeply insightful book. * Enrico Letta, former Prime Minister of Italy * Unflinching realismmasterly integration of economic and political analyses. * Fritz W. Scharpf, Max Planck Institute * As ever thoughtful and thought-provoking, Loukas Tsoukalis prompts us to re-examine the fundamentals of contemporary European integration. * Dame Helen Wallace *

Preface ix
1 High Stakes
1(20)
Then and now
1(5)
The fault, dear Brutus
6(3)
The world around us
9(4)
A long list of questions
13(6)
The car and the driver
19(2)
2 Ever Bigger, More Intrusive, and Less Inclusive
21(34)
Key elements
22(4)
An ever expanding project
26(4)
All the way to the euro
30(3)
Distributional effects
33(3)
Numbers and diversity
36(6)
European foreign policy: not yet
42(3)
Faltering consensus
45(4)
Referendums on Europe
49(6)
3 Reality Strikes Back
55(22)
Honeymoons are not forever
56(3)
What went wrong?
59(6)
An international crisis turns European
65(1)
Ugly Russian dolls
66(7)
Innocence lost
73(4)
4 Whose Rules and Whose Adjustment?
77(38)
Some `unthinkables' happen
77(3)
Bailouts that dare not speak their name
80(6)
One taboo proves harder to break
86(6)
Austerity rules
92(5)
Structural reform with an ideological prefix
97(2)
Who runs the show?
99(4)
Who runs the risk?
103(3)
And who pays the bill?
106(4)
Toxic politics and flawed economics
110(5)
5 The Priest, the Sinner, and the Non-Believer
115(31)
A divided and unhappy church
115(3)
Germany: successful but reluctant to lead
118(3)
Indignant and with strong views
121(6)
Greece's success story shattered
127(3)
Economic and political implosion
130(5)
Britain's Europe
135(5)
What is the real question?
140(6)
6 Still Holding Together, But...
146(30)
The European paradox
147(5)
Domestic losers and broken contracts
152(4)
Immigrants and refugees
156(7)
Security and high politics
163(4)
Fear not love
167(4)
The end of an era?
171(5)
7 Difficult Choices
176(35)
Leaders, free-riders, misfits, and laggards
179(5)
Growth on the way to Tipperary
184(4)
Reform, cohesion, and taxation
188(5)
Democracy in a monetary union
193(4)
Treaty revisions, people's power, and sacred cows
197(4)
Ready for adult life?
201(5)
What if?
206(5)
Notes 211(20)
Index 231
Loukas Tsoukalis is Professor of European Integration at the University of Athens and President of the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP), the main Greek think tank on European and foreign policy. He has taught at many of the top universities around Europe, including Oxford, the London School of Economics, and the College of Europe. He has also held visiting professorships at Sciences Po in Paris, the European University Institute in Florence, and King's College, London. In 2016, he was Pierre Keller Visiting Professor at Harvard University. The author of many books on European integration and international political economy, he habitually crosses the boundary between economics and politics, theory and policy, and is familiar with the Brussels world, having served as special adviser to the former President of the European Commission. A public intellectual, he has for long been actively engaged in the European policy debate.