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This volume brings together contributions that conceptualize and
measure EU perceptions in the strategic regions around the world in
the aftermath of the UK referendum. Contributors assess the
evolution of EU perceptions in each location and discuss how their
findings may contribute to crafting foreign policy options for the
"new EU-27". Brexit is very likely to have a substantial bearing on
EU external policy, not merely because of the loss of a major
member state with a special relationship to the US and the
Commonwealth, but also because it challenges the integrational
success story that the EU strives to embody. This book thus serves
a dual purpose: on the one hand it broadens the recent studies on
Brexit by focusing on external partners' reactions, and on the
other it allows for an innovative evaluation of policy options for
EU foreign policy. Based on a solid theoretical foundation and
empirically rich data, it constitutes an innovative and timely
addition to the evolving debate on Brexit and its consequences.
This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of
European politics, Brexit, British politics, EU politics,
comparative politics and international relations.
This volume brings together contributions that conceptualize and
measure EU perceptions in the strategic regions around the world in
the aftermath of the UK referendum. Contributors assess the
evolution of EU perceptions in each location and discuss how their
findings may contribute to crafting foreign policy options for the
"new EU-27". Brexit is very likely to have a substantial bearing on
EU external policy, not merely because of the loss of a major
member state with a special relationship to the US and the
Commonwealth, but also because it challenges the integrational
success story that the EU strives to embody. This book thus serves
a dual purpose: on the one hand it broadens the recent studies on
Brexit by focusing on external partners' reactions, and on the
other it allows for an innovative evaluation of policy options for
EU foreign policy. Based on a solid theoretical foundation and
empirically rich data, it constitutes an innovative and timely
addition to the evolving debate on Brexit and its consequences.
This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of
European politics, Brexit, British politics, EU politics,
comparative politics and international relations.
The book examines the transformation of European football in recent
years by focusing on the impact of Europe in general and the EU in
particular on the way that the game has evolved in a broad cross
section of European states. The book brings together two
significant research agendas: first, that on the governance of
sport in Europe/the European Union; secondly, that within European
integration studies on 'Europeanisation' (most commonly understood
at the process of change in the domestic arena resulting from
European integration). The concept of Europeanisation and in
particular' top down' Europeanisation is used to shape the
individual country case studies. Other transformational factors
such as globalization are also assessed. The three chapters in the
introductory section set the context within which the
transformation of European football has occurred with particular
emphasis on the role of UEFA and EU institutions. The ten country
studies in the central part of the book include the five leading
football nations in Europe and smaller countries that are facing
new challenges in the competitive environment of modern European
football. They include an example of a country that is a recent
accession state and one outside the EU. What emerges from these
chapters is both the shaping influence of Europeanisation but also
the extent to which it is countered and modified by national
culture and structures. What is also noticeable the sense of
decline amongst some of the small and even larger footballing
nations in the continent. This book will be of interest to students
of European politics, sports governance and football, it also
represents a substantial contribution to the debate on
Europeanisation. -- .
Few events over the past few decades have given rise to an amount
of debate and speculation concerning the state of the European
Union (EU) and the future of European integration as the economic
and financial crisis that began in 2007. In spite of substantial
media, policy-making and academic attention, the fundamental
questions of why and how the euro area (EA) has remained not only
intact but also expanded and integrated further during the crisis
require deeper theoretical investigation. One needs to understand
not only the economics but also the politics and institutions of
the crisis. A lack of such an understanding is the reason why a
number of observers, at least initially, had a hard time making
sense of policy-makers' decisions (and pace thereof), including why
the EA did not implode as some predicted. Economic theories provide
a certain perspective for why the crisis occurred and what economic
policies were and are needed to resolve it; however, they fail to
capture the deeper roots and management of the crisis. In order to
improve our understanding of a discussion that has oscillated
between fears of EA disintegration on the one hand and the concrete
advancement of integration during the crisis on the other, this
special collection brings together leading scholars of European
integration who apply key theoretical approaches - from liberal
intergovernmentalism and neofunctionalism to other prominent
theoretical accounts that have been applied to European integration
such as historical institutionalism, critical political economy,
normative theory, and a public opinion approach - to the economic
and financial crisis. The contributions seek to analyse, understand
and/or explain the events that occurred and the (re)actions to them
in order to draw conclusions concerning the applicability and
usefulness of their respective theoretical perspectives. This book
was published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public
Policy.
Few events over the past few decades have given rise to an amount
of debate and speculation concerning the state of the European
Union (EU) and the future of European integration as the economic
and financial crisis that began in 2007. In spite of substantial
media, policy-making and academic attention, the fundamental
questions of why and how the euro area (EA) has remained not only
intact but also expanded and integrated further during the crisis
require deeper theoretical investigation. One needs to understand
not only the economics but also the politics and institutions of
the crisis. A lack of such an understanding is the reason why a
number of observers, at least initially, had a hard time making
sense of policy-makers' decisions (and pace thereof), including why
the EA did not implode as some predicted. Economic theories provide
a certain perspective for why the crisis occurred and what economic
policies were and are needed to resolve it; however, they fail to
capture the deeper roots and management of the crisis. In order to
improve our understanding of a discussion that has oscillated
between fears of EA disintegration on the one hand and the concrete
advancement of integration during the crisis on the other, this
special collection brings together leading scholars of European
integration who apply key theoretical approaches - from liberal
intergovernmentalism and neofunctionalism to other prominent
theoretical accounts that have been applied to European integration
such as historical institutionalism, critical political economy,
normative theory, and a public opinion approach - to the economic
and financial crisis. The contributions seek to analyse, understand
and/or explain the events that occurred and the (re)actions to them
in order to draw conclusions concerning the applicability and
usefulness of their respective theoretical perspectives. This book
was published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public
Policy.
Explaining outcomes of decision-making at the European level has
occupied scholars since the late 1950s, yet analysts continue to
disagree on the most important factors in the process. In this
book, Arne Niemann examines the interplay of the supranational,
governmental and non-governmental actors involved in EU
integration, along with the influence of domestic, supranational
and international structures. The book restates and develops
neofunctionalism as an approach for explaining decisions in the
European Union and assesses the usefulness of the revised
neofunctionalist framework on three case studies: the emergence and
development of the PHARE programme, the reform of the Common
Commercial Policy, and the communitarisation of visa, asylum and
immigration policy. Niemann argues that this classic theory can be
modified in such a way as to draw on a wider theoretical repertoire
and that many micro-level concepts can sensibly be accommodated
within his larger neofunctionalist framework.
Explaining outcomes of decision-making at the European level has
occupied scholars since the late 1950s, yet analysts continue to
disagree on the most important factors in the process. Arne Niemann
examines the interplay of the supranational, governmental and
non-governmental actors involved in EU integration, along with the
influence of domestic, supranational and international structures.
This book restates and develops neofunctionalism - the most widely
discussed and criticised integration theory - as an approach for
explaining decisions in the European Union and assesses the
usefulness of the revised neofunctionalist framework on three case
studies: the emergence and development of the PHARE programme, the
reform of the Common Commercial Policy, and the communitarisation
of visa, asylum and immigration policy. Niemann argues that this
classic theory can be modified in such a way as to draw on a wider
theoretical repertoire and that many micro-level concepts can
sensibly be accommodated within his larger neofunctionalist
framework.
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