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The ‘widening and deepening’ of the European Union, 1951-2005

The ‘widening and deepening’ of the European Union, 1951-2005. Dr Maurice FitzGerald Lecturer in European and International Studies Department of Politics, International Relations and European Studies (PIRES) Loughborough University email m.fitzgerald@lboro.ac.uk

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The ‘widening and deepening’ of the European Union, 1951-2005

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  1. The ‘widening and deepening’ of the European Union, 1951-2005 Dr Maurice FitzGerald Lecturer in European and International Studies Department of Politics, International Relations and European Studies (PIRES) Loughborough University email m.fitzgerald@lboro.ac.uk web http://www-staff.lboro.ac.uk/~eumf2/index.htm

  2. aims of this presentation • to examine some of the fundamental processes involved in the history of European integration across the second half of the 20th century, especially in terms of the European Union’s ‘widening and deepening’ • to argue that this process is both dynamic and ongoing, and that the United Kingdom, with its European partners, has more to gain than to lose from a process which looks set to continue across the 21st century

  3. all the trappings of a state? anthem constitution currency day flag Gateway to the European Union http://www.europa.eu.int

  4. federalism neofunctionalism intergovernmentalism system governance network governance neo-institutionalism social constructivism integration through law discursive approaches gender perspectives some theoretical approaches Antje Wiener & Thomas Diez (eds.), European integration theory (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), p.240

  5. what is ‘Europeanization’? Ian Bache & Andrew Jordan (eds.), The Europeanization of British Politics? (Basingstoke: Palgrave, forthcoming), definition: “the reorientation and reshaping of aspects of politics and governance in the domestic arena in ways that reflect the policies, practices and preferences of European level actors” further details available at http://www.shef.ac.uk/ebpp/meetings.htm [2 March 2005] and http://www-staff.lboro.ac.uk/%7Eeumf2/RSS2004-05.htm [2 March 2005]

  6. basic enlargement history 1951 ‘Six’ Belgium, France, West Germany (FRG), Luxembourg, Italy, and the Netherlands 1973 ‘Nine’ Denmark, Ireland, and the United Kingdom 1981 ‘Ten’ Greece 1986 ‘Twelve’ Portugal, and Spain 1990 East Germany (GDR) 1995 ‘Fifteen’ Austria, Finland, and Sweden 2004‘Twenty-five’ Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia } northern }southern … and Norway }‘forgotten’ }EFTAN … and Norway CEEC{ (incl. ‘Club Med’)

  7. treaty basis for enlargement Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe – Article I-58 Conditions of eligibility and procedure for accession to the Union • The Union shall be open to all European States which respect the values [of the European Union, namely “respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities. These values are common to the Member States in a society in which pluralism, non-discrimination, tolerance, justice, solidarity and equality between men and women prevail”] … and are committed to promoting them together. • Any European State which wishes to become a member of the Union shall address its application to the Council. The European Parliament and national parliaments shall be notified of this application. The Council shall act unanimously after consulting the Commission and after obtaining the consent of the European Parliament, which shall act by a majority of its component members. The conditions and arrangement for admission shall be the subject of an agreement between the Member States and the candidate State. That agreement shall be subject to ratification by each contracting State, in accordance with its respective constitutional requirements.

  8. examples of policy development }Treaty of Paris }Treaties of Rome 1951 European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) 1957 European Economic Community (EEC) European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) 1965 merger treaty forms the European Communities (EC) 1968 completion of the Common Market 1986 Single European Act (SEA) 1992 Treaty of European Union (TEU, also known as Maastricht) 1997 Treaty of Amsterdam 2001Treaty of Nice 2004 Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe (ratification pending) e.g. CAP … & CFP < } from Single Market (1992) to single currency (2002) ‘eurosclerosis’ QMV … more QMV … even more QMV

  9. the UK and the EU … a partnership made in heaven? Edward Heath signing away UK sovereignty? Margaret Thatcher eurosceptic … or europhile? John Major put Britain at the heart of Europe? Tony Blair EU-US bridge/pivot … or Trojan horse?

  10. will the real UK please step forward? Time, 13 July 1962 Time, 14 May 1979

  11. reasons for concern? • administration: this enlargement is forcing the EU to reinvent and reform itself or else it will become unworkable, while also forcing the CEECs to address a whole host of problems – politically, economically, judicially, and socially, • internal market: the EU population has grown from 380 to 455 million consumers, the land mass has become ¼ as big again in size • security considerations: protecting peace and security near to the EU’s new borders and near neighbourhood, with drugs, prostitution and terrorism at the forefront of government and media attention • single currency: the eurozone of 12 countries, and its Growth and Stability Pact the next waves of enlargement Turkey applied in April 1987 Romania applied in June 1995 Bulgaria applied in December 1995 Croatia applied in February 2003

  12. reform and the future? • Treaty of Nice ratification: entered into force in 2003, and implementation is now well under way • EU25 … and further enlargement: new composition and structures of the European Council, Council of Ministers, Commission, Parliament, and the Courts, as well as changes in working practices • budgetary perspective 2007-2013: CAP is – not for the first time – up for debate, if not yet in the EU certainly within the context of the World Trade Organisation, Transatlantic relations, etc. • constitutional treaty ratification: Hungary, Lithuania and Slovenia have already completed this process; Spain recently had a referendum on the subject and favours it by 3:1, the French government has called a referendum for 29 May 2005, and the UK may well be the last EU25 state to hold one in the spring of 2006

  13. Luxembourg presidency • Mid-term review of the Lisbon process • Examination of the Stability and Growth Pact • Financial perspectives for 2007-2013 • Enlargement • Economic and social affairs and the internal market • Agriculture and fisheries / food safety • Sustainable development • External relations • Justice and Home Affairs http://www.eu2005.lu/en/presidence/priorites_et_pgm/priorites/index.html

  14. conclusions • ‘widening and deepening’ are relatively constant, certainly entwined, elements in a dynamic and ongoing European integration process • evolving out of the ECSC, it has grown both in terms of membership and competence from Six  EC9  EC10  EC12  EU15  EU25 • what does the 21st century hold for the EU, Europe, and the wider world?  EU??

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