Changes in the narratives of Europeanization. Reviewing the impact of the union before the crisis

IF 1 Q1 Arts and Humanities
Timofey Agarin
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The original idea for this special issue of Südosteuropa was mooted back in the summer of 2014, when the fi rst fi ssures began to appear in the approach of the European Union (EU) towards its candidate countries in the Balkans. Over the time we have been soliciting, then working on the papers and going through the revision process, many events took place in the EU, its candidate countries, and in the neighbourhood. The political crisis in Ukraine has turned into fullscale civil war; anxieties over the prospect of entry into the European Union have given space to pessimism about the general prospects of the once indivisible EU; talk of new rounds of accession has gradually become more and more muted. Also, the referendum on the UK’s membership in the EU has raised the spectre of other member-states turning their backs on the EU’s closer geopolitical and economic integration. And, most recently, the foiled coup d’état in Turkey has been taken as a mandate for a top-down reshaping of domestic institutions in that country, with consequences that remain uncertain. All these political developments question the role and indeed the ability of the EU to bring about change in its member, candidate, and neighbouring states that would meet the expectations of these countries’ citizenries. What is more, these changes in the political dynamics across the wider Europe urge us to rethink our expectations of the Europeanization process, about its implications for its member and candidate states, and not least about the very basis of the normative framework undergirding the EU. Two years ago, my fellow authors and I were already pessimistic about the timeline for the Western Balkan states’ accession to the EU. At that time, JeanClaude Juncker had just spelt out that there would be no further enlargement during his term as the head of the EU Commission, and it seemed to many of our critics that we were simply toeing the line of European bureaucrats too Südosteuropa 65 (2017), no. 1, pp. 1-9
欧洲化叙事的变化。回顾危机前工会的影响
这期《Südosteuropa》特刊的最初想法是在2014年夏天提出的,当时欧盟(EU)对其巴尔干候选国的态度开始出现第一个问题。在我们征求意见、编写文件和进行修订的过程中,许多活动都发生在欧盟及其候选国和周边地区。乌克兰的政治危机已经演变成全面的内战;对加入欧盟前景的焦虑,使人们对曾经不可分割的欧盟的总体前景感到悲观;关于新一轮入盟的讨论逐渐变得越来越沉默。此外,英国加入欧盟的公投引发了其他成员国背弃欧盟更紧密的地缘政治和经济一体化的担忧。最近,土耳其被挫败的政变被视为自上而下重塑该国国内机构的任务,其后果仍不确定。所有这些政治发展都质疑欧盟的作用,甚至质疑欧盟在其成员国、候选人和邻国实现变革的能力,以满足这些国家公民的期望。更重要的是,整个欧洲政治动态的这些变化促使我们重新思考我们对欧洲化进程的期望,对其成员国和候选国的影响,尤其是对支撑欧盟的规范框架的基础。两年前,我和我的同事们已经对西巴尔干国家加入欧盟的时间表感到悲观。当时,让-克洛德·容克刚刚明确表示,在他担任欧盟委员会主席期间,不会进一步扩大欧盟,在我们的许多批评者看来,我们也只是在遵循欧洲官僚的路线
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Sudosteuropa
Sudosteuropa AREA STUDIES-
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