Germany, France, and the integration of Europe : a realist interpretation
著者
書誌事項
Germany, France, and the integration of Europe : a realist interpretation
Pinter, c1998
- : hard
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 209-221) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This study analyzes the European Union's history-making reforms in 1985 and 1991, from a realist point of view, focusing on the role of Germany and France. Stressing the prominent role of Germany in Europe's constitutive politics, the text argues that the EU is less a sign of the abandonment of power politics than the product of a new "soft" great power strategy typical of comparatively weak regional big powers. The analysis of the Intergovernmental Conferences is placed in a longer historical perspective and embedded in an overall interpretation of the role of big powers in processes of regional integration. The book thus develops a theory of co-operative hegemony and symmetrical federalization.
目次
- Structure or strategy
- the primacy of politics in European integration
- a theory of co-operative hegemony
- a new kind of nationalism
- the Gaullist interlude
- tactical differentiation - the Single European Act
- structural asymmetry - the Maastricht Treaty
- barriers to hegemony - the ratification crisis
- geopolitical asymmetry - the post-Maastricht era
- Europe's co-operative hegemony.
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