1st Edition

Cosmopolitan Government in Europe Citizens and Entrepreneurs in Postnational Politics

By Owen Parker Copyright 2013
272 Pages
by Routledge

272 Pages
by Routledge

265 Pages
by Routledge

The invocation of ‘the market’ has been omnipresent in media discussions of ‘crisis Europe’. On the one hand, ‘the market’ is presented as that to which EU member states must collectively respond. It is the very purpose of a post-national government and that which dictates individual and collective identities. The expansion of market is that which guarantees and constitutes peace in Europe. On... Read more

Introduction: The Ethics Of Cosmopolitan Government In Europe  PART I: MARKET EUROPE  1. Foucault on liberal government  2. The expansion of liberal government  PART II: SOCIAL EUROPE  3. Habermas’s ‘constitutional patriotism’  4. Postnational citizens and their ‘others’  PART III: PLURAL EUROPE  5. The turn to ‘new governance’  6. Postnational citizen meets postnational entrepreneur  Conclusion

Biography

Owen Parker is a Lecturer in European politics at the University of Sheffield. His work addresses the governance of political economy, security and identity in the EU and has been published in such outlets as Journal of European Public Policy and Journal of Common Market Studies.

'Owen Parker has developed an important, timely and original argument about varieties of ethical reasoning in the area of cosmopolitanism and has shown how the EU project consists of a series of contests around rival cosmopolitanisms. This superb book makes very significant contributions to both international theory and European integration studies.' - Professor Ben Rosamond, University of Copenhagen

'In Cosmopolitan Government in Europe, Owen Parker hits the sweet spot between sophisticated theory and rich empirical analysis. A serious contribution to EU analysis, his Foucauldian take on the relationship between the market and the social in Europe deserves a wide readership among scholars and students of international theory and IPE.' - Daniel Wincott, Blackwell Professor of Law and Society, Cardiff Law School.