European University Institute Library

E pluribus Europa?, assessing the EU compound polity by analogy with the early US Republic, Andrew Glencross

Label
E pluribus Europa?, assessing the EU compound polity by analogy with the early US Republic, Andrew Glencross
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 239-262)
resource.dissertationNote
Thesis (Ph. D.)--European University Institute (SPS), 2007.
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
E pluribus Europa?
Nature of contents
theses
Oclc number
1038729654
resource.otherEventInformation
Defence date: 28 May 2007
Responsibility statement
Andrew Glencross
Series statement
EUI PhD thesesEUI theses
Sub title
assessing the EU compound polity by analogy with the early US Republic
Summary
As a novel and complex polity, also subject to endless proposals for institutional reform, the viability of the EU is an open but under-theorized question. This thesis conceptualizes EU viability from an internal perspective, that is, the viability of the process of integration rather than Europe as a viable actor in international politics. Adopting the concept of a compound polity to understand the tensions inherent in the EU, viability is defined in relation to the -rules of the game- of this compound system. This gambit has a twofold purpose. Firstly, it permits an analogy with another historical case of a compound system, the antebellum US republic. Secondly, it enables the specification of two scenarios of viability in a compound polity: dynamic equilibrium and voluntary centralization. Four aspects of the rules of the game (institutions, expectations, competence allocation and representative functions) are analysed to determine which scenario the EU follows. The analogy with the early US and its own conflicts over these four elements of the rules of the game is then contrasted with the EU experience. Five differences in how these disputes arise and the means for trying to settle them are singled out to explain the differing problems of viability in both compound polities. The results of this analogical analysis are then used to explore the appropriateness of certain proposed changes to the rules of the game in the EU, notably in the area of political representation. In a system accustomed to dynamic equilibrium, enhancing the representation of individuals is often seen as a condition for favouring more voluntary centralization. However, the analysis of conflicts over the rules of the game in two compound systems suggests a more cautious approach is required in the interests of viability. Hence this study presents itself as a significant, if incomplete, initial step in the process of identifying what makes the EU viable
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