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European Integration in Social and Historical Perspective : 1850 to the Present

Ebbinghaus, Bernard(Contributions by)Faist, Thomas(Contributions by)Hanagan, Michael(Contributions by)Hobsbawm, E J.(Contributions by)Lemke, Christiane(Contributions by)Marks, Gary(Contributions by)Moch, Leslie Page(Contributions by)Noiriel, Gerard(Contributions by)Klausen, Jytte(Edited by)Tilly, Louise A.(Edited by)
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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 of capitalists sustained international cooperation and attempts to define universal standards for welfare and a social dimension to economic development.

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.

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RRP £41.00
Product Details
Rowman & Littlefield
0847685012 / 9780847685011
Paperback / softback
337.14
20/11/1997
United States
English
384p.
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