ABSTRACT

The statement “Austria has always belonged to Europe” is banal in its reference to a common geographical space, but problematic, when made about Austria’s policy towards West European integration since 1945. European Union (EU) membership has also had a significant impact on the center-periphery relationship in Austria. For a long time, accession to the EU seemed bound to result in a restructuring of the federal system of Austria which, because of the limited powers of the Lander, should appropriately be described as a decentralized unitary state. The institutions themselves and the institutional balance within the Austrian political system are also affected. Only one year after Austria’s accession to the EU, the far-reaching consequences of EU membership, which even indirectly contributed to the breakdown of the grand coalition on 12 October 1995, are slowly becoming more apparent. At a time of a domestic crisis of orientation, the change amounts to a silent revolution.