Margins in European Integration explores a new, important perspective for an expanding Europe: that as integration attempts to accommodate to an ever greater kaleidoscope of economic interests and political positions, margins and marginality become visible, perpetual features of the 'integrated' Europe, and permanent elements in the dynamics shaping it.
Margins in European Integration explores a new, important perspective for an expanding Europe: that as integration attempts to accommodate to an ever greater kaleidoscope of economic interests and political positions, margins and marginality become visible, perpetual features of the 'integrated' Europe, and permanent elements in the dynamics shaping it.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
NOEL PARKER is Senior Lecturer in European Studies, Department of Linguistics and International Studies at the University of Surrey, Guildford. BILL ARMSTRONG is a Research Scholar in Linguistics and International Studies at the University of Surrey, Guildford.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Tables List of Figures Acknowledgements Foreword Notes on the Contributors PART I: WHAT MAKES THE MARGINS MARGINAL? Integrated Europe and its 'Margins': Action and Reaction; N.Parker European Integration through the Kaleidoscope: The View from the Central and Eastern European Margins; H.E.Hartnell European Integration, Market Liberalization and Regional Disparities; V.Lintner Economic Development on the Periphery of the European Union; L.Budd PART II: MANAGING ECONOMIC FORCES AT THE MARGINS EU Trade and Aid Strategy in the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean; M.Toksoz Multi-national Investment on the Periphery of the EU; C.Flockton Transnational Planning on the German-Polish Border; A.Kennard PART III: THE POLITICAL POSSIBILITIES OF MARGINALITY European Union Governance and National Territorial Politics: Rewriting Marginality in Spain and Portugal; J.Magone Euroscepticism in the Ideology of the British Right; C.G.Flood Home at Last?: Czech Views of Joining the EU; P.Bugge Historical Memory and the Boundaries of European Integration; H.Frey Concluding Observations Index
List of Tables List of Figures Acknowledgements Foreword Notes on the Contributors PART I: WHAT MAKES THE MARGINS MARGINAL? Integrated Europe and its 'Margins': Action and Reaction; N.Parker European Integration through the Kaleidoscope: The View from the Central and Eastern European Margins; H.E.Hartnell European Integration, Market Liberalization and Regional Disparities; V.Lintner Economic Development on the Periphery of the European Union; L.Budd PART II: MANAGING ECONOMIC FORCES AT THE MARGINS EU Trade and Aid Strategy in the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean; M.Toksoz Multi-national Investment on the Periphery of the EU; C.Flockton Transnational Planning on the German-Polish Border; A.Kennard PART III: THE POLITICAL POSSIBILITIES OF MARGINALITY European Union Governance and National Territorial Politics: Rewriting Marginality in Spain and Portugal; J.Magone Euroscepticism in the Ideology of the British Right; C.G.Flood Home at Last?: Czech Views of Joining the EU; P.Bugge Historical Memory and the Boundaries of European Integration; H.Frey Concluding Observations Index
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