This book sheds light on how member states and EU neighbours reacted to the COVID-19 pandemic through the lens of European solidarity, what they expect from the EU, and other member states, and how they are ready to contribute to common action. The volume reveals how European countries experience and perceive solidarity from the EU and towards the EU in different policy dimensions, such as intra-EU mobility, healthcare and financial and economic aspects of Europes recovery. The book offers national perspectives and perceptions of solidarity and concrete aspects in different policy areas. It includes a Foreword by the Vice-presidents of the European Parliament Katarina Barley and Othmar Karas.
MEMBER STATES Austria first?- Belgium: Struggling with Solidarity.-
Bulgaria: Free-riding on EU solidarity.- Croatia: Solidarity lost in
translation.- Cyprus quest for EU solidarity: juxtaposing community values
with national interest.- Flexible solidarity and the limits of altruism in
Czechia.- Danish Frugal Solidarity.- Estonia: symbols of solidarity or traps
of interdependence?- Finland: Cherry-picking on solidarity?- France:
solidarity for others and for itself!- Germany: Together for Europes
recovery? Wir schaffen das!.- Contested European solidarity in times of
migration crisis: the Greek case.- European Solidarity? A view from a
renitent Hungary.- Ireland: Dublin Benefits from and Contributes to European
Solidarity.- Italy: the straw that breaks the camels back?- Latvias
Peripheralised Solidarity: Rise and Fall of the Baltic Bubble during the
COVID-19 Pandemic.- Perceptions of European solidarity in Lithuania - plus ēa
change, plus cest la mźme chose?- Liberty, Fraternity, Recovery - The
Luxembourg perspective.- Solidarity as the Small State Mantra for Maltas EU
Membership.- Poland: from the Solidarity movement to non-reciprocal European
solidarity.- Gone with the pandemic? - Portugal and EU solidarity.- Romania
relies on the EUs solidarity budget to overcome the pandemic.- The extent of
solidarity - (mis)interpretation in Slovakia.- Slovenia: Solidarity sounds
right, but can we see it?- Spains view of European solidarity: a pro-EU
attitude and a self-perception of weakness.- Sweden: COVID-19 messing up the
concept of solidarity.- The Netherlands: Solidarity and responsibility are
two sides of the same coin.- "EU NEIGHBOURS Is the EU Albanias Indispensable
Ally Through Thick and Thin?".- Can the coronavirus defeat ethno-politics?
Paradoxes of solidarity and politics in Bosnia and Herzegovina.- Georgias
Pandemic Response: promoting European integration through the lens of
solidarity.- European solidarity out of self-interest: Iceland and crisis
management in the EU.- Friends in need are friends indeed: how Kosovo failed
to show solidarity during COVID-19 crisis.- Liechtenstein: Solidarity, Yes,
but on my terms.- Montenegro: Enlargement solidarity, Hoping for the Best-
EU solidarity in action: the curious case of North Macedonia welcomed
amidst quarantine!- European solidarity in a time of crisis: a Norwegian
perspective.- Serbia: Shared Loyalties Amidst the Pandemic.- Switzerland:
solidarity taken hostage.- Solidarity clashes with geopolitics in EU-Turkey
Relations.- United Kingdom: Brexit meets European Solidarity.- EU-Ukraine:
Towards a New Quality of Solidarity.
Dr. Michael Kaeding is Jean Monnet Professor for European Integration and European Union Politics at the Institute of Political Science of the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany. He is visiting fellow of the European Institute of Public Administration in Maastricht and member of the flying faculties of the College of Europe, Bruges, and the Turkish-German University in Istanbul. Between 2016 - 2019 he was the chairman of the Trans European Policy Studies Association. Dr. Johannes Pollak is Professor of International Relations and rector of Webster Vienna Private University, Austria. Prior to this position, he headed the Department for Political Science at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Vienna (on leave). In summer 2019, he was elected chairperson of the Board of the Institute of European Politics in Berlin. Paul Schmidt is the Secretary General of the Austrian Society for European Politics, which promotesand supports analysis and communication on European affairs. Prior to that he has worked at the Oesterreichische Nationalbank, both in Vienna and at their Representative Office in Brussels at the Permanent Representation of Austria to the European Union.