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Book Details
Abstract
This book draws on critical theory to introduce readers to ways of exploring questions about the EU from a political economy perspective, questions like: Does the EU help or hinder Europe's 'social models' to face the challenges of globalization? Does the EU represent a break from Europe's imperial past? What were the causes of the Eurozone crisis?
‘This book engages European Union theory, history and policy from a critical political economy perspective. It succeeds both in reviewing the EU's past turbulent passage and surveying the stormy waters the EU now must navigate. All readers will benefit from the authors' depth of knowledge and sweep of vision.’ – Peter Katzenstein, Cornell University, USA
‘The European project is in deep trouble. This book is a must read for anyone who wants to understand how it got there, and to fully appreciate the depth and breadth of the EU’s multiple crises. Drawing on a long tradition of critical scholarship, Cafruny and Ryner present a trenchant account of how the European project has become trapped in an ordoliberal iron cage from which there is no easy escape.’ – Dorothee Bohle, European University Institute, Italy
‘Sweeping in its ambition and hugely impressive in its execution, this lucid, important and timely book will become compulsory reading for all scholars and students working in the areas of political economy and EU studies. We have long needed a book that properly situates the European Union within an analysis of the shifting global political economy. Cafruny and Ryner have delivered on that promise spectacularly well and in so doing have produced a book that combines scholarly virtue with the production of a crisp and critical central thesis…’- Ben Rosamond, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Magnus Ryner is Professor of International Political Economy at King's College London, UK.
Alan Cafruny is Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Affairs at Hamilton College, USA.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover | ||
Contents | v | ||
Preface and Acknowledgements | viii | ||
Acronyms | x | ||
Introduction | 1 | ||
Argument and structure of the book | 3 | ||
Chapter 1 Traditional Narratives, Traditional Theory | 11 | ||
The widening perspective | 12 | ||
The deepening perspective | 13 | ||
The interstate bargain perspective | 17 | ||
The liberal tradition and European integration | 18 | ||
Realism and the intergovernmentalist critique | 26 | ||
Conclusion | 29 | ||
Chapter 2 Critical Political Economy | 30 | ||
An alternative narrative: socioeconomic epochs | 31 | ||
The Red Queen Syndrome | 37 | ||
Open Marxism: basic functions and form of capitalist governance and the EU | 40 | ||
The EU and inter-capitalist rivalry: the legacies of Servan-Shreiber, Mandel, and Poulantzas | 43 | ||
Regulation theory: Fordism, finance-led accumulation, and the repression of social democratic alternatives | 51 | ||
The Amsterdam School: accumulation strategies and hegemonic projects | 55 | ||
Conclusion | 57 | ||
Chapter 3 The Single Market: Consolidating Neoliberalism | 59 | ||
The single market project: ‘Europe 1992’ | 60 | ||
Explaining the relaunch | 63 | ||
The relaunch and Europe’s social model of capitalism? Possibility of synthesis? | 73 | ||
The single market, neoliberalism, and finance-led growth | 76 | ||
Conclusion | 82 | ||
Chapter 4 Origins and Development of the Emu: Money and Finance in the European Union | 84 | ||
Monetary and financial developments in Europe | 85 | ||
Liberal theories in trouble: the ‘economics’ of the EMU and financial liberalization | 94 | ||
The ‘politics’ of the EMU and financial liberalization | 99 | ||
Post-Keynesian and regulation theoretical alternatives | 100 | ||
The (non-)optimal currency area problem | 104 | ||
Whither Rhineland capitalism? | 106 | ||
Social forces in the making of European money and finance | 108 | ||
Conclusion | 111 | ||
Chapter 5 The Welfare State: Whither the ‘Social Dimension’? | 113 | ||
European welfare capitalism | 116 | ||
EU social policy | 122 | ||
Debates over the social dimension: the pessimists versus the optimists | 125 | ||
Conclusion | 136 | ||
Chapter 6 Core and Periphery in an Enlarged European Union | 137 | ||
Key policy instruments and enlargement | 139 | ||
Diffusion and polarization in the single market: uneven development and Europe’s north–south dynamics | 142 | ||
‘Really existing’ transitions in Central and Eastern Europe | 144 | ||
Further to the east: European partnerships | 153 | ||
Consent and coercion in EU enlargement: beyond the integration telos? | 156 | ||
Was there an alternative? | 160 | ||
The enlargement trilemma | 162 | ||
Conclusion | 164 | ||
Chapter 7 The American Challenge Revisited: The Lengthening Shadow of US Hegemony | 167 | ||
Imperialism: Europe and the US | 168 | ||
The end of the European era and the rise of the Americani mperium | 170 | ||
From the ECSC to the Treaty of Rome | 173 | ||
The high point of Europe | 177 | ||
After the Cold War: neoliberalism and NATO expansion | 179 | ||
Towards a common European foreign policy? | 183 | ||
The German question redux | 187 | ||
Conclusion | 192 | ||
Chapter 8 The European Union, the Global South, and the Emerging Powers | 194 | ||
The EU and the Global South | 195 | ||
Migration | 202 | ||
Emerging markets and emerging (?) powers | 206 | ||
TTIP: consolidation of the Atlanticist bloc? | 212 | ||
Conclusion | 217 | ||
Conclusion: The Ordoliberal Iron Cage | 219 | ||
Another Eurozone? Another Europe? | 222 | ||
References | 228 | ||
Index | 264 |