ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Differentiation in the European Union offers an essential collection of groundbreaking chapters reflecting on the causes and consequences of this complex phenomenon.

With contributions from key experts in this subfield of European Studies, it will become a key volume used for those interested in learning the nuts and bolts of differentiation as a mechanism of (dis)integration in the European Union, especially in the light of Brexit. Organised around five key themes, it offers an authoritative "encyclopaedia" of differentiation and addresses questions such as:

  • How can one define differentiation in the European Union in the light of the most recent events?
  • Does differentiation create more challenges or opportunities for the European Union?
  • Is Europe moving away from an "ever closer Union" and heading towards an "ever more differentiated Union", especially as leading political figures across Europe favour the use of differentiation to reconcile divergences between member states?

This handbook is essential reading and an authoritative reference for scholars, students, researchers and practitioners involved in, and actively concerned about, research in the study of European integration. As European differentiation is multifaceted and involves a wide range of actors and policies, it will be of further interest to those working on countries and/or in policy areas where differentiation is an increasingly relevant feature.

 

The Introduction and chapters 13, 21, 30, and 35 of this book is available for free in PDF format as Open Access from the individual product page at www.routledge.com. It has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

Differentiation in the European Union as a field of study
ByBenjamin Leruth, Stefan Gänzle, Jarle Trondal
Size: 0.34 MB

part 1|132 pages

Conceptualizing differentiation

chapter 2|11 pages

Studying differentiated integration

Methods and data
ByMarian Burk, Dirk Leuffen

chapter 3|16 pages

On the legitimacy of differentiated integration

ByErik O. Eriksen

chapter 4|16 pages

Differentiated (dis)integration beyond Europe

A comparative regionalism approach 1
ByStefan Gänzle, Jens Uwe Wunderlich

chapter 5|15 pages

De facto differentiation in the European Union

Circumventing rules, law, and rule of law
ByTobias C. Hofelich

chapter 6|18 pages

Constitutive differentiation

ByJohn Erik Fossum

chapter 7|17 pages

EU external differentiated integration and compliance

Theoretical and legal aspects
ByMaryna Rabinovych, Anne Pintsch

chapter 8|16 pages

From integration to fragmegration

Political symbols and the emergence of differentiated European identities
ByRussell Foster

chapter 9|17 pages

Differentiation and segmentation

ByJozef Bátora, John Erik Fossum

part 2|131 pages

Institutionally based differentiation

chapter 10|15 pages

An ever more fragmented Union?

On the emerging relevance of the institutional implications of differentiated integration in the EU
ByAlexander Schilin

chapter 11|14 pages

Promise unfulfilled?

Managing differentiated integration in EU secondary law through enhanced cooperation 1
ByDaniela Kroll

chapter 12|16 pages

Differentiation in the European Parliament

United about diversity? 1
ByGuri Rosén

chapter 13|16 pages

Differentiation and the European Central Bank

A bulwark against (differentiated) disintegration?
ByDaniel F. Schulz, Amy Verdun
Size: 0.78 MB

chapter 14|15 pages

Differentiation and the European Commission

ByDiane Fromage, Cristina Fasone

chapter 15|17 pages

Differentiation and the European Court of Justice

BySabine Saurugger, Fabien Terpan

chapter 16|16 pages

Third-country participation in EU agencies

Towards “condominio”? 1
BySandra Lavenex

chapter 17|16 pages

The Council of the European Union

Organizational and social dynamics of differentiation
ByJeffrey Lewis

part 3|160 pages

Policy-based differentiation

chapter 18|21 pages

Differentiated integration in EU Energy Market Policy

ByTorbjørg Jevnaker

chapter 19|15 pages

Brexit and the Common Fisheries Policy

Opportunities for multi-level differentiated (dis)integration?
ByArno van der Zwet, John Connolly, Christopher Huggins, Craig McAngus

chapter 20|15 pages

The European Asylum Policy

Core state powers, flexibility and differentiated integration
ByFoteini Asderaki, Eleftheria Markozani

chapter 21|15 pages

Differentiated integration in EU climate policy

ByElin Lerum Boasson, Merethe Dotterud Leiren, Jørgen Wettestad
Size: 0.72 MB

chapter 22|15 pages

Differentiated integration in European external action

ByThomas Henökl

chapter 23|21 pages

PESCO

A formula for positive integration in European defence
BySteven Blockmans, Dylan Macchiarini Crosson

chapter 25|18 pages

Differentiation and social policy

A sustainable way forward?
ByBenjamin Leruth, Sven Schreurs

chapter 26|15 pages

Differentiation in EU security and defence policy

ByElie Perot, Stephan Klose

part 4|156 pages

Territorial differentiation

chapter 27|15 pages

The Nordic countries as pioneers of differentiation

ByBenjamin Leruth, Jarle Trondal

chapter 28|18 pages

Risky advantageous differentiation

Iceland and the EEA
ByBaldur Thorhallsson

chapter 29|20 pages

The Swiss and Liechtenstein relations with the EU

An ongoing institutional challenge
ByChristian Frommelt

chapter 30|17 pages

Turkey's external differentiated integration with the EU in the field of migration governance

The case of border management
ByEbru Turhan, Ayselin Yıldız
Size: 0.75 MB

chapter 31|18 pages

Visegrád Four and EU differentiated integration

Activities, perception and self-perception after the refugee crisis 1
ByPetr Kaniok, Vratislav Havlík, Veronika Zapletalová

chapter 32|14 pages

Poland as the (new) awkward partner

Differentiated integration or differentiated disintegration?
ByAgnieszka K. Cianciara

chapter 34|16 pages

European Neighbourhood Policy

Differentiated integration beyond the EU's Eastern and Southern borders
ByZuzana Reptova

chapter 35|16 pages

Differentiation at the local level

An overview of subnational authority networks in the EU 1
ByPier Domenico Tortola, Stefan Couperus
Size: 0.97 MB

part 5|138 pages

Brexit

chapter 36|14 pages

Brexit as a phenomenon

National solidarity as a tool against the European project?
ByMikko Kuisma, Matthew Donoghue

chapter 37|14 pages

(Post-)Brexit

Negotiating differentiated disintegration in the European Union 1
ByFrank Schimmelfennig

chapter 38|16 pages

International perceptions of Brexit 1

ByJohanna Speyer, Natalia Chaban, Arne Niemann

chapter 39|15 pages

Differentiation and power asymmetry

How Brexit is changing UK relations with Czechia and Slovakia
ByMonika Brusenbauch Meislová, Andrew Glencross

chapter 40|16 pages

Brexit and Northern Ireland

ByDavid Phinnemore

chapter 41|16 pages

Border conflicts and territorial differentiation after Brexit

The cases of Northern Ireland, Gibraltar and the UK Sovereign Base Areas in Cyprus
ByNikos Skoutaris

chapter 42|16 pages

Growing apart together?

Brexit and the dynamics of differentiated disintegration in security and defence
ByBenjamin Martill, Monika Sus

chapter 43|10 pages

Conclusion

ByBenjamin Leruth, Stefan Gänzle, Jarle Trondal

chapter |13 pages

Epilogue

Polycrisis and resilience in the European Union: Covid-19 and avenues for future studies
ByMarianne Riddervold, Akasemi Newsome, Jarle Trondal