Part One: Theory
1: Theories of European Integration
2: Theories of EU Governance
3: Theorizing Consequences
4: Critical Perspectives
Part Two: History
5: From the End of the War to the Schuman Plan (the Late 1940s to
the Early 1950s)
6: The 'Other' European Communities and the Origins of the European
Economic Community (the Early 1950s to the 1960s)
7: The First Years of the European Economics Community (the 1960s
and into the 1970s)
8: The Revival of European Integration (the Mid-1970s to the Late
1980s)
9: Maastricht and Amsterdam (the Late 1980s to the Late 1990s)
10: From Amsterdam to Lisbon (2000-09)
11: The EU in Crisis (2009-19)
Part Three: Institutions
12: The Institutional Architecture
13: The European Commission
14: The European Council and the Council of the European Union
(EU)
15: The European Parliament
16: The Court of Justice of the European Union
17: Organized Interests
Part Four: Policies
18: Policy Making and Policies in the European Union
19: The Single Market
20: Economic and Monetary Union
21: Agriculture
22: Environment and Climate
23: Freedom, Security, and Justice
24: Trade and Development Aid
25: Common Foreign and Security Policy
26: Enlargement
Simon Bulmer is Professor of European Politics at the University of
Sheffield. He has published numerous books, articles and book
chapters on the EU. The most recent books are Germany and the
European Union: Europe's Reluctant Hegemon? (with William Paterson,
Macmillan 2019), and The Member States of the European Union (with
Christian Lequesne, OUP 2020). He is a Fellow of the Academy of
Social Sciences.
Owen Parker is Senior Lecturer in European Politics at the
University of Sheffield. He is the author of Cosmopolitan
Government in Europe: Citizens and Entrepreneurs in Postnational
Politics (Routledge, 2013), and co-editor of Crisis in the Eurozone
Periperhy: The Political Economies of Greece, Spain, Ireland and
Portugal (with Dimitris Tsarouhas, Palgrave, 2018) as well as
numerous articles on the EU, European politics, and political
economy. He previously worked for the European Commission on
enlargement policy.
Ian Bache is Professor of Politics at the University of Sheffield.
His EU-related books include: Multi-level Governance (with Matthew
Flinders, 2004); The Europeanization of British Politics (with
Andrew Jordan, 2006); and Europeanization and Multi-level
Governance (2008). His more recent research focuses on the politics
of wellbeing. He was awarded Fellowship of the Academy of Social
Science in 2014.
Stephan George is Emeritus Professor of Politics at the University
of Sheffield. He has authored, co-authored, and edited many books
on the politics of policy-making in the European Union, and on
British policy towards the EU, as well as numerous articles in
journals and chapters in edited books. He is a former Chair of
UACES, the UK's academic association for Contemporary European
Studies.
Charlotte Burns is a Professor of Politics at the University of
Sheffield. Her recent projects involve analysing the impacts of
Brexit on UK and EU environmental policy and the impact of the
global financial and economic crisis upon EU environmental policy.
Her research has appeared in a range of leading journals including
the Journal of European Public Policy, the Journal of Common Market
Studies and Environmental Politics.
This latest edition is particularly useful in that it includes
chapters on the subject area that students of EU Studies often find
to be the most difficult and troublesome of all, namely integration
theory. [This] is particularly useful not only because, unlike the
contents of several competing texts, it is actually present, but
also because it includes valuable descriptions and explanations of
the historiography of European integration theory (which can be
something of a mystery to EU newcomers), but also clear and lucid
accounts both of the nature of already well-established theories,
including intergovernmentalism and neofunctionalism, and also of
new and emerging theoretical approaches, notably constructivism,
critical political economy, and feminism.
*Neill Nugent, Manchester Metropolitan University, IEUSS Review of
Books, January 2021*
This is simply the best introduction to the EU and European
integration currently available - a wonderful entry point for
students who seek both broad-ranging coverage and deep knowledge of
the subject.
*Ben Rosamond, Professor of Politics, University of Copenhagen,
Denmark*
Everything students need to know, and often don't even know to ask,
can be found in this highly accessible, highly readable
introduction to the Politics of the European Union.
*Vivien A. Schmidt, Jean Monnet Professor of European Integration,
Boston University, USA*
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