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Introduction to the EU Gary Marks. Five Perspectives on the EU 1. Peace 2. Democracy 3. Protest 4. Efficiency 5. Survival.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to the EU Gary Marks. Five Perspectives on the EU 1. Peace 2. Democracy 3. Protest 4. Efficiency 5. Survival."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to the EU Gary Marks

2 Five Perspectives on the EU 1. Peace 2. Democracy 3. Protest 4. Efficiency 5. Survival

3 PERSPECTIVE ONE Peace World War I: 20 million dead World War I: 20 million dead World War II: 70 million dead World War II: 70 million dead What to do about nationalism: the most deadly force in human history

4 A “United States of Europe”...What is this sovereign remedy? It is to recreate the European Family or as much of it as we can and provide it with a structure under which it can dwell in peace, in safety and freedom. We must build a kind of United States of Europe. Therefore I say to you: “Let Europe Arise!” Zurich, 19 Sept 1946

5 “... only one solution: we must bind ourselves inextricably to Germany...” Jean Monnet The Schuman Declaration Europe will not be made all at once, or according to a single plan. It will be built through concrete achievements... The French government proposes that Franco-German production of coal and steel as a whole be placed under a common High Authority... as a first step in the federation of Europe. An y war between France and Germany becomes not merely unthinkable, but materially impossible. …. Robert Schuman, 9 May 1950 How can war be averted? JJean Monnet Robert Schuman

6 Three Landmarks The European Coal and Steel Community (1951): Succeeded! The European Coal and Steel Community (1951): Succeeded! European Defence Community (1954): Failed! European Defence Community (1954): Failed! The European Economic Community (1957): Succeeded! The European Economic Community (1957): Succeeded!

7 PERSPECTIVE TWO Democracy It’s no secret We actually know how to consolidate democracy

8 Copenhagen criteria “Membership requires that the candidate country has achieved stability of institutions guaranteeing...” 1) the rule of law, human rights and respect for, and protection of minorities 2) democracy 3) the existence of a functioning market economy

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10 PERSPECTIVE THREE Protest no! No! NO!

11 Elites and public on Europe Sources: a) elites, Intune (Fall 2007) b) public opinion: Eurobarometer 68 (Fall 2007)

12 REFERENDA ON EUROPE

13 IDENTITY Source: Commission (2002 survey), Public Opinion (Eurobarometer 2001)

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15 Criticism on the radical right

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17 http://europa.sp.nl/ campagne2004/waakhond.shtml Criticism on the radical left

18 First anti-EU protests in Bulgaria (January 2007) Issue: sales tax on home-made liquor Graffiti: We don’t want Europe We don’t want money We want the liquor at the old prices.

19 Eurobarometer 1992-1998 1=exclusive national identity 2= mix of national and european identity

20 PERSPECTIVE FOUR Efficiency n “Multilevel governance must be a priority.” José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, 2009. “Develop as quickly as possible practical measures... with a view to strengthening multilevel governance.” October 2008 resolution of the European Parliament

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22 Principles of Multilevel Government Centralize where necessary a) encompass relevant externalities a) encompass relevant externalities b) exploit economies of scale Decentralize where possible a) responsive government b) preferences vary

23 Match the scale of government to the scale of problem: Local: garbage pickup Local: garbage pickup Regional: urban sprawl Regional: urban sprawl National: land usage; transport network National: land usage; transport network Continental: Rhine pollution Continental: Rhine pollution Global: climate change Global: climate change

24 1950: sovereign national states National legal systems, armies, taxation, parliaments, welfare health, education Inside countries: legitimate authority, the rule of law, democracy, liberty, equality Outside countries: no legitimate authority, no effective legal or normative order, anarchy, power politics, war

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26 Regionalization in Europe BRITAINScottish, Welsh parliaments, 1997 FRANCEElected regional governments,1982 GERMANYFederal constitution, 1949 ITALYElected regional governments, 1976. Strengthened, 1996. SPAINAutonomous regions, 1978. Strengthened, 1993; 1998.

27 PERSPECTIVE FIVE SURVIVAL Why the EU is the world’s most important experiment

28 A growing number of public bads are transnational

29 Falling cost of transport and communications

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31 climate change nuclear proliferation financial regulation failing states biodiversity loss ocean exhaustion deforestation overfishing nuclear waste disposal epidemics refugees Combatting these problems involves winners and losers

32 national sovereignty is seriously suboptimal

33 6.6% 93.3% 85.0% 11.1% 3.9%

34 the European Union is the world’s most important experiment in creating authoritative, general purpose, supranational government

35 task specific general purpose


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