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For over half a century, European Union has been a promising
endeavor of cooperative institutionalism. It has shown that even
nation states with a long history of conflict are capable of
collaborating with one another to serve their own interests.
However, the EU project has also made visible that there is no
one-size-fits-all policy in economics that can be applied to all
countries with success. Economics starts and ends with the society.
Common culture determines the outcomes of economic policies, and
ordinary people pick up the bill when policies turn out to be
failures. This book presents two different tales of the European
Union to provide an empirical challenge to oversimplified
assumptions behind the neoliberal orthodoxy in policymaking:
Favorable experience of the EU-candidate Turkey, and the
regrettable venture of the EU-member Greece. The fact that these
two neighboring countries with similar cultures have had vastly
different experiences with the European Union suggests that the EU
functions as a catalyst of change in the countries that associate
with it, but this impact could be negative as well as positive
depending on the role the EU plays. Political economist Bulent
Temel presents a lucid analysis of the Turkish and Greek encounters
with the EU based on contributions from a diverse range of social
sciences; economics, game theory, finance, political science and
sociology.
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