1st Edition

European Boundaries in Question

Edited By Richard Bellamy, Joseph Lacey, Kalypso Nicolaidis Copyright 2018
    188 Pages
    by Routledge

    188 Pages
    by Routledge

    European Union boundaries have always been unusual. In no other political community is both the prospect of enlargement and the ever-present possibility of withdrawal part of the constitutional framework. We find few other instances where some territories in a political community adopt a common currency while others do not. Examples of thick association agreements, such as we find between the EU and third countries like Switzerland and Norway, are uncommon. Over the last number of years, EU boundaries have been challenged like never before. Brexit poses a fundamental threat to the EU’s territorial integrity and the rights of EU citizens to cross what have been regarded as open borders; the refugee crisis and the increase of terrorism both call into question the EU’s ability to justly and effectively manage its external borders; the rise of populism is a direct challenge to internal free movement as the demand to reassert national borders becomes formidable; while the aftermath of the euro-crisis continues to put Monetary Union in doubt. By distinguishing between three categories of boundary change – boundary-making, boundary-crossing and boundary-unbundling – the authors in this volume attempt to shed light on the sustainability and legitimacy of Europe’s boundaries in question. The chapters originally published as a special issue in the Journal of European Integration.

    1. European boundaries in question?  Boundary Making 2. The legitimacy of exits from the European Union  3. Changing EU internal borders through democratic means  4. Enlargement, association, accession – a normative account of membership in a union of states  5. Homeland security: territorial myths and ontological security in the European Union  Boundary-crossing 6. The quintessentially democratic act? Democracy, political community and citizenship in and after the UK’s EU referendum of June 2016  7. Boundaries of political community in Europe, the US, and Canada  8. Just boundaries for demoicrats  9. Counter-terrorism in the EU’s external relations  Boundary-unbundling 10. A demoicratic justification of differentiated integration in a heterogeneous EU  11. The remaking of the EU’s borders and the images of European architecture

    Biography

    Richard Bellamy is Professor of Political Science at University College London, UK, and Director of the Max Weber Programme at the European University Institute, Italy.





    Joseph Lacey is a Junior Research Fellow at University College, Oxford. He holds a PhD from the European University Institute, Italy.





    Kalypso Nicolaïdis Professor of International Relations and director of the Center for International Studies at the University of Oxford, UK. She is also chair of Southeastern European Studies at Oxford and Council member of the European Council of Foreign Relations.