Today’s Europe is marked by an amazing pace of integration. The European Union now consists of twenty five member states, however there is confusion and disagreement about its future design. Making The European Polity investigates how the European Union should develop and organize itself and offers a reflexive approach to integration based on the theory of communicative action. It conceives of the EU as a law based supranational polity lacking the identity of a people as well as the coercive means of a state and argues that it is a polity with an organized capacity to act, but no sole apex of authority. Making an important contribution to the theoretical discussions on the EU, these contributors explore a range of issues including legitimacy, post-national democracy and integration and provide in-depth analyses of social and tax policy, foreign policy, identity formation, the reform process and the constitutional effects of enlargement. This book will appeal to all political scientists and particularly to students and researchers of European Politics.
Author(s): Erik Oddvar Eriksen (editor)
Edition: 1
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 304
Half Title: Making the European Polity......Page 2
Title Page......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Illustrations......Page 8
Contributors......Page 9
Acknowledgements......Page 12
Introduction......Page 14
Part I Reflexive polity-building and post-national integration......Page 20
1 Reflexive integration in Europe......Page 22
2 Reflexive constitution-making and transnational governance......Page 43
3 On the political theory of the Euro-polity......Page 72
4 Public discourse, identity and the problem of democratic legitimacy......Page 97
Part II The Euro-polity in the making......Page 138
5 The quest for European identity......Page 140
6 Contemporary European constitution-making......Page 156
7 Towards a post-national foreign and security policy?......Page 180
8 The purse of the polity......Page 200
9 Soft governance, employment policy and committee deliberation......Page 227
10 Widening or reconstituting the EU?......Page 250
11 Conclusion......Page 266
Bibliography......Page 284
Index......Page 305