This book explores the most important components and contributing
factors to the European integration process during the 1950s. It seeks
to combine comparative politics and political history to examine core
themes such as war experience, national security, military security,
economic security, societal security, and research and education in
three major European countries, i.e. France, Germany, and Britain. It
analyses the references to the ensuing European integration process in
national parliamentary debates, analyzing which national needs were
thought European integration could cater to, but also which national
positions were seen as being compromised by a closer European
commitment. The development of a national position on European
integration and in turn the evolution of European concepts are
considered by using discourse theory on parliamentary debates in
France, Germany, and Britain. Parliamentary discourses are shown to be
an ideal source for analyzing grand themes, such as European
integration, because they cover all fundamental ideas; they have to be
public and open-ended deliberations which in turn determined the
position of each country towards European integration. The great
variety of positions reflected in the parliamentary discourse, in
particular those which did not prevail and which did not find their
way into the commonly accepted historical storyline of European
integration, provide a greater comprehensiveness and a better
understanding of the history of the European integration process.
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War Experience, Changing Security Concepts, and Research and Education
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780739192139
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter