This electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-ND) open access license. This substantially updated and revised edition offers a comprehensive overview of the challenges confronting the political system as well as the international politics of the European Union. It draws from a spectrum of regional integration theories to determine what the Union actually is and how it is developing, examining the constitutional politics of the European Union, from the Single European Act to the Treaty of Nice and beyond. The ongoing debate on the future of Europe links together the questions of democracy and legitimacy, competences and rights, and the prospects for European polity-building. The aim is to contribute to a better understanding of the emerging European polity and the questions that further treaty reform generates for the future of the regional system. The authors also assess the evolving European security architecture; the limits and possibilities of a genuine European foreign, security and defence policy; and the role of the EU in the post-Cold War international system. Common themes involve debates about stability and instability, continuity and change, multipolarity and leadership, co-operation and discord, power capabilities and patterns of behaviour. The book traces the defining features of the ‘new order’ in Europe and incorporates an analysis of the post-September 11th context.
İçerik tablosu
Introduction 1. The theoretical setting 2. New directions in theory-building 3. The Amsterdam reforms: partial offsets and unfinished business 4. The Treaty of Nice and its critics 5. Geopolitical imperatives of system change: order and security in post-Cold War Europe 6. Institutional imperatives of system change: the evolving European security architecture 7. Debating the future of Europe: new polity dynamics Index
Yazar hakkında
Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of Athens