2009-2015 年冰岛争取加入欧盟过程中的文化叙事、危机和争议

H. Hallgrímsdóttir, Michael J. Carpenter, Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly, Maximilian Conrad
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2008 年全球金融危机爆发后,冰岛提出了加入欧盟的申请。在国内,加入欧盟被视为经济复苏的关键和预防未来经济困境的措施。申请加入欧盟本身是在迅速变化的政治环境中进行的,其背景是整个欧洲经济萎靡不振,同时还伴随着经济救助计划和紧缩措施。申办最终失败的几个方面表明了围绕国家独立和欧洲一体化的身份和叙事的重要性。最突出的是,人们对加入欧盟意味着什么的普遍看法,特别是围绕敏感的主权概念的看法,被证明是亲欧盟运动中更具经济性的理由所无法克服的。因此,冰岛的申办为深入研究紧缩经济、大众政治和欧洲一体化项目之间的复杂关系提供了一个独特的机会,具有重要的政策意义。为了更好地从社会政治角度理解申欧的出现及其失败,我们评估了不同的概念框架,包括功能主义、政府间主义和后功能主义方法,以及关于危机和争议政治的理论观点。我们还在 2012 年至 2018 年间的研究访谈中收集了来自民间社会和政府的冰岛公民的声音。总之,我们的比较理论方法和原始案例数据使社会科学和政策研究更加强调文化叙事和身份认同作为欧盟一体化关键决定因素的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cultural narrative, crisis, and contention in Iceland's bid to join the European Union, 2009–2015
In the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, Iceland launched a bid to join the European Union. Joining the EU was presented domestically as a key to economic recovery and as a preventative measure against future economic distress. The bid itself was framed within a rapidly shifting political landscape, set against a backdrop of spreading economic malaise across Europe, accompanied by economic bailout plans and austerity measures. Several aspects of the bid's ultimate failure demonstrate the importance of identities and narratives around national independence and European integration. Most saliently, widespread perceptions about what it would mean to join the EU, particularly around sensitive notions of sovereignty, proved insurmountable to the more economistic rationale of the pro-EU campaign. The Icelandic bid thus presents a distinct opportunity to drill down into the complex relationships between austerity economics, popular politics, and the European integration project, with significant policy implications. To better understand the emergence of the bid and its failure in sociopolitical terms we assess different conceptual frameworks, including functionalist, intergovernmentalist, and post-functionalist approaches and theoretical perspectives on crisis and contentious politics. We also include voices of Icelandic citizens from civil society and government collected in research interviews between 2012 and 2018. Overall, our comparative theoretical approach and original case data sharpen an emphasis in the social sciences and policy research on the importance of cultural narrative and identity as key determinants of EU integration.
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