The enlargement of European-based organisations has reached a near
terminal point. The Council of Europe and the Organisation for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) currently cover virtually
all states of Europe (Belarus still remains excluded from the first
of these). The EU and NATO have experienced extensive processes of
enlargement and the scope for continuing enlargement is now limited
largely to the Balkans and the European neutrals. Given this state
of affairs it is now pertinent to think of a Europe characterised
not by enlargement but by post-enlargement. In International
Relations (IR) conceptual thinking on Europe (as opposed just to
the EU) has been undertaken using a range of scholarly tools. In
this volume, attention to Europe proceeds from English School (ES)
thinking, and specifically its three-fold distinction between
international system, international society and world society. It
is the international society element (the
development/institutionalisation of shared interests and identities
buttressed by rules and norms) which signifies in their most
concrete form different patterns of interaction or integration
between states. This book will be of interest to international
relations scholars, as well as practitioners within the European
Union and other intergovernmental institutions. It was published as
a special issue of the Journal of European Integration.
General
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