Summary of the Politics: Europe course taught in the second year and first semester of the BA International Studies at Leiden University. It contains an extensive summary of lectures 1 to 6.
Leiden University College The Hague (LUC)
International Studies
Politics: Europe
Alle documenten voor dit vak (1)
Verkoper
Volgen
evevanberkel
Ontvangen beoordelingen
Voorbeeld van de inhoud
Lecture 1. European Integration
Lecture 1.1: Turning Point Years in Contemporary European Politics
(1989, 2008, 2015/2016, 2020)
1989
- Meaning of 1989 for global politics in the 1990s/2000s?
- Meaning of 1989 for European politics in the 1990s/2000s?
- Changing meaning of 1989 for global politics in the 2000s/2010s?
- Changing meaning of 1989 for European politics in the 2010s?
- The whole world was moving in the same direction: Liberal democracy
- Moment of optimism
- Objective to include Eastern Europe, which was a promise/propaganda in the Cold War
for Western Europe
- Liberation (example: dancing on the Berlin Wall)
- Demand put forward by the new leaders that they should be allowed to join the
European Union
- Changing meaning: A reconceptualization of 1989 in a more negative direction
- Democratic backslide
- Sense of confidence of the direction Post-Cold War was mistaken
- Meaning has shifted
- In 2010s the discourse is overly focused in Hungary and Poland
- Overtime they developed a more darker view of 1989
2008
- What happened?
- What were its major consequences?
- European banks were affected by the economic/financial crisis in the United States
- Wounded up with a severe recession
- Led to the collapse of many governments in Europe
- Outbreak of the sovereign debt crisis in Greece
- Important factors in domestic politics
- East / West divide
1. The Great Recession (Double-dip recession)
2. Sovereign Debt Crisis
3. Eurozone Crisis
4. Austerity Politics
,2015/2016
- What happened?
- What were its major consequences?
- Refugee crisis from September 2015 until around summer 2016
- Conflicts in the European Union has continued
- Elections in Greece January 2015 and Syriza is elected from the radical left
- Germany is more powerful and beats Syriza
- Launched into the migration crisis
1. Election of Syriza and Greek referendum on terms of EU bailout
2. Migration crisis
3. Brexit referendum (and Trump’s election)
2020
- Covid
____________________________
Lecture 1.2: Introduction to European Integration
What is the European Union?
1. An international organization?
- Conceptualize the relationship between states within the European Union and
the states outside of the EU. As an effect, the EU would be an international
organization.
- International treaties as agreements between states. Those treaties are what
European integration is.
- The actors are national actors in the conception of how the EU works.
2. A Polity?
- Key example: EU law unlike international law has direct effect. It is enforceable
and must be enforced by national courts. This is not the case in international
law.
- If the EU is a polity it should be studied like other polities.
- You have created a state-like organization, and therefore you should look for its
comparative politics and political systems.
, - Looks towards existing models of political organization, not international
organization.
- They are less interested in the treaties, and more about what happens in
between the treaties.
3. Sui generis?
- Meaning: unique
- The EU is something new. Nothing like this has ever existed before.
Key Terms
- Sovereignty
- There is no power above, you are the top power
- Federalism
- A system of shared sovereignty between a federal and fault states
- European integration
- Historic origins
- Comes from the term Marshall Plan
- The term is ambiguous and open-ended
- Supranationalism
- Supranational
- Nationalism above one’s state/identity
- Common mechanisms to decision-making (no veto: an official power or right to
refuse, accept or allow a decision or proposal made by a lawmaking body)
- Germany
- Intergovernmentalism
- Intergovernmental
- Is in affect an international organization
- No transfers of sovereignty: A state has a veto or the right to not participate
- Free Trade Area
- Custom Union; Common Market
Coming in the lecture:
- (Neo)functionalism - Ernst Haas; The United of Europe (1958)
- Political and security communities - Karl Deutsch; Political Community and the North
Atlantic Area (1957)
- Schuman Plan (1950), Paris Treaty, European Coal and Steel Community
- Treaties of Rome (1957), European Economic Community
Institutions of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)
- The ECSC was a combination of supranational elements with intergovernmental
elements. It was a mixed system.
- Creation of a supranational executive which has powers. It has the ability to overrule
governments.
- Council of Ministers: Most powerful institution of the ECSC. This was the representation
of the governments. The main decisions were made in the Council.
ECSC:
, - High Authority (supranational)
- Two commissioners from each country, supposed to operate above national
interests in interests of community as a whole
- In theory could make directives if opposed by member state governments, in
practice it did not
- Council of Ministers (intergovernmental)
- Representatives of member state governments
- Exercised more powers than envisioned in Treaty of Paris
- Court of Justice (supranational)
- Resolve legal disputes between national governments, the directives of the High
Authority, and businesses
- Common Assembly (supranational)
- Unelected, appointed delegates by national parliaments
- Not a legislative body, mostly advisory
- Formal power of censure: could force retirement of entire High Authority
- Consultative Assembly (supranational)
- Corporatist advisory assembly of trade union, employer and consumer
organizations
Forms of Regional Economic Integration
- Free Trade Area:
- Free Trade Area eliminates/limits imports and exports
- Do not need any institutions for this area
- Weakest form of international integration
- Negative integration: Remove barriers within countries
- > ‘Tariffs and quotas are eliminated among members, but each country retains
its tariffs against imports from non-members.’
- Customs Union:
- > ‘Members erect a common external tariff in addition to the free trade area’
- Common Market:
- Free trade area and a customs union
- Free movements of people in between
- Negative integration: Removal of barriers
- Four Freedoms:
1. Freedom of labor
2. Capital
3. Services and persons
4. Creates institutions of cooperation
- > ‘Combines the features of the customs union but with the elimination of
obstacles for the free movement of labour, capital, services and persons (and
entrepreneurship)’ and creates institutions of cooperation
- > These form the ‘Four Freedoms’ in European Integration
- Fiscal Union:
- > A community with a common budget, debts, bonds, and taxes
Voordelen van het kopen van samenvattingen bij Stuvia op een rij:
√ Verzekerd van kwaliteit door reviews
Stuvia-klanten hebben meer dan 700.000 samenvattingen beoordeeld. Zo weet je zeker dat je de beste documenten koopt!
Snel en makkelijk kopen
Je betaalt supersnel en eenmalig met iDeal, Bancontact of creditcard voor de samenvatting. Zonder lidmaatschap.
Focus op de essentie
Samenvattingen worden geschreven voor en door anderen. Daarom zijn de samenvattingen altijd betrouwbaar en actueel. Zo kom je snel tot de kern!
Veelgestelde vragen
Wat krijg ik als ik dit document koop?
Je krijgt een PDF, die direct beschikbaar is na je aankoop. Het gekochte document is altijd, overal en oneindig toegankelijk via je profiel.
Tevredenheidsgarantie: hoe werkt dat?
Onze tevredenheidsgarantie zorgt ervoor dat je altijd een studiedocument vindt dat goed bij je past. Je vult een formulier in en onze klantenservice regelt de rest.
Van wie koop ik deze samenvatting?
Stuvia is een marktplaats, je koop dit document dus niet van ons, maar van verkoper evevanberkel. Stuvia faciliteert de betaling aan de verkoper.
Zit ik meteen vast aan een abonnement?
Nee, je koopt alleen deze samenvatting voor €6,49. Je zit daarna nergens aan vast.