ABSTRACT

The Maastricht Treaty in 1992 was based on neoliberal ideas of a market-driven European economy and democracy, and continues to be seen as a step towards a new stage of unification: towards a more federal Europe based on market integration. The authors demonstrate that European integration as a federal project actually came to an end around 1970. The European Economic Community (EEC) - the precursor of EU - was never thought of as a democracy. The authors locate a shift in thinking about legitimacy and further integration in the 1980s when the idea of a European democracy was connected with a plan for the internal market: the market would pave the way for democracy. Since then, there has been a growing tension between the official line about a democratic EU and the institutional capacity to carry it through. This tension undermined integration. The book suggests that, instead of democracy-through-market, there are signs of increasing social disintegration, political extremism and populism in the wake of economic integration. Providing a more realistic historical understanding of European integration, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of political science, history and European studies.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

What democracy in which Europe?

part I|50 pages

A historical outline

part II|44 pages

The European public sphere in history, theory and practice

part III|40 pages

European values and the European Union

chapter 7|17 pages

European values and history

chapter 8|6 pages

Value production at the political centre

chapter 9|15 pages

Academic value production

part IV|44 pages

The contours of a historical theory of the EU

chapter 10|13 pages

The historical analogies

chapter 12|19 pages

The future