European integration in social and historical perspective

European integration in social and historical perspective
About this book
Exploring the social dimensions of state formation and European integration, a respected interdisciplinary group of European and North American scholars takes a novel approach to the historical processes of integration. Rather than being led by EU institutions and intergovernmental policy, the contributors argue that integration is primarily influenced by non-state actors: unions, businesspeople, elites, and immigrants.
Exploring the historical roots of integration, they trace contemporary integration efforts back to nineteenth-century social action in response to capitalist development. As today, it was a time when internationalism - both that of workers and capitalists - sustained international cooperation and attempted to define a social dimension to economic development and to set universal standards for welfare. The reemergence of an integrated Europe as an alternative to the system of states produced by the settlements of 1918 and 1945 has provided a new opening for internationalism.
The contributors view this as a positive trend, especially as a counterbalance to intensifying conflicts over growth, the distribution of wealth, welfare, and global access to markets and jobs.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL18898444W
Subjects
European federationEconomic integrationUE/CE HistoireInternational economic integrationAspects sociauxUE/CE IntégrationEuropese integratieIntégration économiqueEurope, history, 19th centuryEurope, history, 20th centuryEurope, foreign relations