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Regionalism and the EU

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Detailed, thorough notes on Regionalism and the EU based on the suggested Edexcel A-Level textbook

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  • September 26, 2022
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Regionalism and the EU

Key definitions:
 regionalism:creation and implementation of institutions that express a particular identity
and shape collection action within a geographical region
 European Union (EU):political-economic union of 28 member states located in Europe
 sovereignty:absolute and unlimited power and authority
 European integration:the process of industrial, political, legal, economic, social and cultural
integration of states in Europe
 supranationalism:a large amount of power given to an authority, which, in theory, is place
higher than the state
 intergovernmentalism:interaction among states based on sovereign independence
 homogenisation:coming together of global cultures and development of a single,
homogenous culture without diversity or dissent
 federalism:legal and political structures where power is distributed between two distinct
levels of government on the basis that neither is subordinate to the other
 widening and deepening:process by which the EU has attempted to expand membership
while furthering integration

Regionalism

 Interconnectedness and interdependence relate to economic and trade matters, health,
science, communication technology, crime and security
 Increasing move for states to form and join multilateral regional organisations
 Examples: European Union (EU), African Union (AU), Arab League, the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)
 Regionalism faces challenges in the future; states do not like giving up sovereignty, and
nations have a strong desire to govern themselves = with nationalism, there is a backlash
against regional co-operation
 2016 = British people voted to leave the EU, nationalistic parties gained support across
Europe, Donald Trump was elected as president of the USA

Different forms of regionalism
 Economic = focuses on the financial and trade aspects of regional co-operation = trade blocs
 Security = trying to achieve peace and security = either by enhancing interdependence and
interconnected, making war impossible, or through binding the member states against a
common enemy (e.g. ASEAN; shared fear of growth of communism in SE Asia)
 Political = share the same values so seek to protect them, and enhance their standings and
voice in the world (e.g. AU and Arab League)
 Considerable overlap and tend to feed each other = security is achieved through economic
co-operations, protection of values is achieved through security and economic
 EU = after horrors of WWII and the Holocaust = Euro-federalists (e.g. Jean Monnet and
Robert Schuman) believed that European institutions and integration, and trade, would
make war in Europe a thing of the past = economics was a central role = European

, integration with the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) in 1951 = aim to make it
impossible for the signatory states to go to war as their ability to produce coal and steel was
no longer in the hands of other states = common market was created and supranational
decision making

Debates about and the reasons and significance of regionalism

The relationship between regionalism and globalisation
 Globalisation has been heightened by regionalism = states in a region co-operate on an
economic, security or political level (e.g. EU, NAFTA and ASEAN have increased trade
between member states, and therefore globalisation = positive: more trade brings greater
competitions and economies of scale = negative: some can’t compete in larger, tougher
markets, leading to a scaling back of industries and job losses)
 Why states join = enable individual states to improve their leverage in the international
system against global companies, and to develop their comparative advantage = defend
against globalisation by pooling their sovereignty = regionalism: co-operation of states to aid
governance and solve mutual problems
 Critics or globalisation criticise regionalism = enhancing and furthering globalisation =
negative impact on industries, on communities on jobs
 Democracy is undermined by supranational or intergovernmental bodes than make binding
decisions beyond the reach of the people = decisions lack accountability, and sovereignty
and self-determination are undermined (e.g. EU receives criticism over the freedom of
movement it allows = EU citizens are free to live and work in other states, leading to
significant numbers of people emigrating around Europe = 750,000 Polish people in recent
years to the UK = voting public has no ability to limit these numbers) (e.g. NAFTA = USA
perceives it as outsourcing jobs to Mexico, resulting in industry closures and job losses in the
USA = immigrants can be blamed for taking what jobs there are or undercutting wages of
local people = those who have lost jobs or feel alienated may blame regional organisations)
 Regional organisations and globalisation benefits ‘big corporations’ and TNCs = benefits to
TNCs over local or national producers = critics argue that as consumers all purchase the
same things and big corporations are pushing out small companies, there is cultural
homogenisation = states cannot protect their own industries or producers as economic
regional organisations tend to limit this = benefits mostly to the USA as it controls much of
the culture industry and many globally known products = but non- US producers also have
access to the US market (e.g. German and Japanese car industry have been very successful
and have cost many jobs in the US car industry)
 Alternative view = regional organisations are actually a way of controlling and limiting the
impact of globalisation = globalisation is a powerful force than can affect the sovereignty of
countries, but co-operation and pooling sovereignty is an effective way to fight back
 Environmental issues (e.g. climate change, pollution) do not respect borders = states have
come together to try and halt the effects of climate change through the International Panel
on Climate Change, co-operating to limit the impact of environmental change
 States come together to limit the power of TNCs and their economic mobility = some TNCs
have more wealth than sovereign countries (e.g. Apple = $200 billion in cash reserves,
slightly less than the GDP of the Republic of Ireland + Samsung = $196 billion of revenue,

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