
Europe as Empire The Nature of the Enlarged European Union
by Zielonka, JanBuy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Jan Zielonka is Professor of European Politics at the University of Oxford and Ralf Dahrendorf Fellow at St Antony's College.
Table of Contents
List of Figures and Tables | p. xi |
Introduction: the neo-medieval paradigm | p. 1 |
Genesis of the book | p. 2 |
Unidentified political object | p. 4 |
Should Europe become a state? | p. 7 |
The neo-medieval alternative | p. 9 |
Two types of empire | p. 11 |
Uses and abuses of models | p. 14 |
Structure of the book | p. 20 |
Return to Europe | p. 23 |
Assessing Eastern European progress | p. 25 |
Market reforms and social peace | p. 29 |
Constitutional liberalism or praetorianism? | p. 33 |
Flash points that never flashed | p. 34 |
Comparison with other post-Communist states | p. 36 |
Conclusions | p. 42 |
European power politics | p. 44 |
The purpose of accession | p. 49 |
Imperial design and the process of accession | p. 54 |
Benign empire in action | p. 57 |
Agents behind the accession | p. 59 |
Conclusions | p. 63 |
Diversity and adaptation | p. 65 |
Diversity and European integration | p. 67 |
Diversity and European institutions | p. 71 |
Economic 'fault lines' in the enlarged EU | p. 74 |
Diversity in democracy and political culture | p. 78 |
The American bias | p. 83 |
Conclusions | p. 88 |
Economic governance | p. 91 |
The challenge of internal cohesion | p. 94 |
The global competition challenge | p. 100 |
The cross-border interdependence challenge | p. 105 |
Conclusions | p. 115 |
Democratic governance | p. 117 |
Governance structure | p. 120 |
Majoritarianism versus constitutionalism | p. 125 |
Public space and democratic culture | p. 333 |
Conclusions | p. 137 |
Governance beyond borders | p. 140 |
The EU as an international actor | p. 143 |
The emerging international system in Europe | p. 150 |
Competing universalistic claims: EU versus United States | p. 156 |
Conclusions | p. 162 |
Conclusions: implications of neo-medievalism | p. 164 |
What makes Europe neo-medieval | p. 166 |
Integration through enlargement | p. 171 |
Governing the neo-medieval Europe | p. 176 |
Legitimacy in the neo-medieval Europe | p. 182 |
Participation, representation, and contestation | p. 186 |
The case for optimism | p. 189 |
Notes | p. 192 |
Bibliography | p. 272 |
Index | p. 285 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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