International Institutions - The EU

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Lecture 9
Annie May Jackson
Notiz von Annie May Jackson, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Annie May Jackson
Erstellt von Annie May Jackson vor fast 9 Jahre
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THE EUROPEAN UNION (EU) 1952 - creation of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), 'make war not only unthinkable but materially impossible', France, W Germany, Italy and 3 Benelux countries signed: Treaty of Rome 1992 - Maastricht Treaty creates the European Union (EU) 1973 - 1995 - EU 15 members 2004 - 2013 - EU 28 members 2009 - Lisbon Treaty: expansion of the powers of the EU parliament, creation of the President for the Council, The High Representative for foreign and security policy, European Charter of Fundamental Rights legally binding 2013 - Nice Treaty: changes in voting weights, expansion of majority voting Reasons for initiating the European integrating process: need to preserve peace, need for economic reconstruction, resolution of the 'German Problem', safeguard Europe from Soviet expansion, move beyond the nation-state and nationalism, the role of the US EU IS THE ONLY II THAT HAS LEGALLY BINDING DECISIONS The capability to transform ideology into law is the cornerstone of the integration EU - a political community in which the absence of violence, as mean of action among the participant groups, is given a central place Pooling sovereignty: 1). managing independence/relationships, new states between themselves, former colonial powers, other rival states, 2). consolidating international identity, participating in the international society, 3). managing interdependence, economically, peace and security Nature of the EU, 'la finality': 1). assuring peace, 2). recovery of power-status, 3). building of a large market, 4). competitiveness with the US and Assia, 5). curbing US political and cultural hegemony, 6). a response to globalisation, 7). a first step towards global governance, 8). forging a common European identity, 9). a framework for fostering diversity within and among the states EUROPEANISATION - Enlargement is the EU's most significant and far-erasing foreign policy action, a process of transformation of the domestic structures of a state by European frameworks, norms and rules Europeanisation and Democracy/sovereignty - fear of commonality and cultural homogeneity, democratic deficit, 'the gap between the powers transferred to the European institutions and the ability of European citizens to influence their work and decisions' (McCormick) 'Democratic peace' - international aspect of post communist transitions, democracy promotion, political conditionality, regime improvement, Perpetual Peace: Kant, 'peace among nations' ^ HOWEVER - aggressively pursued, 'hybrid' democracies, slow process leading to set-backs COPENHAGEN CRITERIA - European Council 1993: the achievement of stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for the protection of minorities political conditionality can achieve a degree of consolidation but cannot guarantee stability EU penetrates domestic and international politics NEO-FUNCTIONALISM - Societal forces of modernisation, interdependence and the rise of technology create an open-ended (self-generating) process of integration - transnational society is being shaped by policies at the EU level INTERGOVERNMENTALISM - preference formation and intergovernmental bargaining

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