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This title was first published in 2000: Contemporary Greek society
is characterized by an all-embracing trend for reform. This task,
however, is constrained by problems of Greek polity rooted in the
historical and political culture. This text explores the important
facets of divergence between Greece and the EU, examining the
process through which they affect the relative performance of the
country in the economic, social, political and international
relations fronts, together with significant attempts to modernize
and rationalize internal and external policies and structures. The
book is in five parts. In the first, introductory, section,
Greece's Alternate Minister of Foreign Affairs, the late Yannos
Kranidiotis, analyzes the fundamental objectives of Greek foreign
policy, whilst the editors explore the challenges of EU membership
for Greek domestic and foreign politics, and Greece's participation
in the process of European integration. The second part deals with
Greece and the EMU, the third analyzes the issues related to state
modernization and adjustment. A fourth section examines the welfare
state and related policies, and the final part analyzes Greece's
foreign policy and external relations, with particular emphasis on
the Balkans and Greek-Turkish relations.
This title was first published in 2000: Contemporary Greek society
is characterized by an all-embracing trend for reform. This task,
however, is constrained by problems of Greek polity rooted in the
historical and political culture. This text explores the important
facets of divergence between Greece and the EU, examining the
process through which they affect the relative performance of the
country in the economic, social, political and international
relations fronts, together with significant attempts to modernize
and rationalize internal and external policies and structures. The
book is in five parts. In the first, introductory, section,
Greece's Alternate Minister of Foreign Affairs, the late Yannos
Kranidiotis, analyzes the fundamental objectives of Greek foreign
policy, whilst the editors explore the challenges of EU membership
for Greek domestic and foreign politics, and Greece's participation
in the process of European integration. The second part deals with
Greece and the EMU, the third analyzes the issues related to state
modernization and adjustment. A fourth section examines the welfare
state and related policies, and the final part analyzes Greece's
foreign policy and external relations, with particular emphasis on
the Balkans and Greek-Turkish relations.
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