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This book argues that early European Commission officials envisaged an integrated civil Europe from the outset. Largely overlooked is the fact that between 1951 and 1972 there was a group of European Commission (and before that the High Authority) officials who wished to build a Civil Europe to sit alongside an economic and political Europe. This Civil Europe was, it was hoped, to become home to a European citizenry equipped with a European civil consciousness that complemented their national and local loyalties. To this end these officials pioneered a series of civil initiatives designed to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book argues that early European Commission officials envisaged an integrated civil Europe from the outset. Largely overlooked is the fact that between 1951 and 1972 there was a group of European Commission (and before that the High Authority) officials who wished to build a Civil Europe to sit alongside an economic and political Europe. This Civil Europe was, it was hoped, to become home to a European citizenry equipped with a European civil consciousness that complemented their national and local loyalties. To this end these officials pioneered a series of civil initiatives designed to begin the process of building Civil Europe. This book analyses three such civil initiatives: the building of the first European School, the European Community's participation in Expo 58 and the production of the European Community's own documentaries. From the start Europe was designed and conceived of in terms of a European general civil public and not solely in terms dictated by economic and political interests.
Autorenporträt
Stefanie Pukallus is Lecturer at the University of Sheffield, UK, and Co-Director of Research at the Centre for Freedom of the Media (CFOM). Her research focuses on the civil dimension of European integration and its public communication. Previous publications include Representations of European Citizenship since 1951 (Palgrave, 2016).
Rezensionen
"The book helps us to understand more about a concrete issue of European integration in a specific period. It is well structured and very well documented with a variety of sources. It is of interest to EU studies scholars and to the general public interested in the history of the EU." (Alice Cunha, JCMS Journal of Common Market Studies, Vol. 57 (6), November, 2019)