1st Edition

Differentiated Integration in a Nordic Perspective

Edited By Anne Pintsch, Tor-Inge Harbo, Lars Oxelheim Copyright 2025
250 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

250 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

250 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book analyses differentiation in European integration from a Nordic perspective. Following an interdisciplinary approach and focusing on the idea of the Nordics as a laboratory of differentiation, the book explores specific Nordic concerns in policy fields such as the labour market, security and Justice and Home Affairs (JHA), EU institutions such as the European Commission and the... Read more

Foreword: The case for a confederal Europe

Alexander Stubb

1. Laboratories of differentiation and the Nordic region

Anne Pintsch

Part I Economic and social issues

2. The economics behind the Directive on adequate minimum wages in the EU: Why differentiated integration is a better option

Per Skedinger

3. Nordic pension systems in a European differentiated integration perspective

Eskil Wadensjö and Anne Pintsch

4. The euro area’s favourite outsiders: Denmark and Sweden as laboratories for cooperative euro outsiderness in the EU

Alexander Schilin

PART II Politics and administration

5. Differentiated representation of Nordic staff in the EU institutions

Christoph Demmke

6. Differentiated alignment and Nordic cooperation in security and defence: The case of Swedish and Norwegian air forces

Viktoriya Fedorchak

7. The issue of migration in the Danish referendum on the Justice and Home Affairs opt-out: Opting out from what?

Kristine Graneng

8. Differentiated (dis)integration of preferences: Norm selectivity of stakeholders with respect to the EU’s Arctic Strategy

Özlem Terzi

PART III International conventions and law

9. Alternative integration as a stumbling block for the governance of patents in the EU

Nico Groenendijk

10. The European court of human rights: How Nordic legal pragmatism can promote European integration by allowing for more differentiation

Ole Gjems-Onstad

11. The EEA-agreement: A vehicle for differentiated integration

Tor-Inge Harbo

12. Conclusions: Experimentation and differentiation in the Nordic region

Anne Pintsch

Biography

Anne Pintsch is Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science and Management at the University of Agder, Norway.

Tor-Inge Harbo is Professor of Law at the University of Agder, Norway.

Lars Oxelheim is Professor of International Business and Finance at University of Agder, Norway, affiliated researcher at the Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN), Stockholm, and Professor Emeritus at Lund University, Sweden.

“Understanding differentiation in the European Union requires an in-depth look at the Nordic region, which has been experimenting with new modes of cooperation over the past decades. This timely volume offers fresh insights into the matter, by examining diverse policy areas - from economic and social issues to politics, administration, and law. This makes it essential reading for scholars and practitioners interested in the future of European integration, especially in light of the ongoing challenges that may require more flexible forms of cooperation.”

Benjamin Leruth, The University of Melbourne, Australia

“500 years after the dissolution of the Kalmar Union, the five Nordic countries are yet again united in one and the same defence union, due to Finland’s and Sweden’s accession to NATO. This is promoting further and future Nordic integration in other areas. It is also helpful to the fulfilment of the vision of the Nordic heads of government that the Nordic region should be the world’s best integrated region by 2030. However, my work as Sweden’s representative in the Nordic Council of Ministers’ Freedom of Movement Council shows that much remains to be done to fulfil the vision, not least to fully integrate the Nordic labour markets. The evolution of Nordic differentiation after World War II contains several significant lessons that are of importance to further Nordic integration, as shown in this valuable volume. Thus, it is also highly relevant for the next steps towards a better, or even fully, integrated Nordic region, as well as to integration processes elsewhere.”

Anders Ahnlid, Director-General of National Board of Trade, Sweden