1st Edition

Politicisation, Democratisation and EU Identity National EU Discourses in Germany and France

By Claudia Wiesner Copyright 2024
328 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

328 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

What is it that unites the European Union as a polity? Why is it necessary to democratise the EU? Can EU politicisation help democratising the EU? Why do EU citizens in referenda seemingly vote against the EU? And how can a European identity develop? To tackle these questions, this book makes a theoretical, conceptual and empirical contribution to the study of EU politicisation, democratisation,... Read more
1. Introduction: EU politicisation, EU democratisation, EU identity and national EU discourses 2. The Democratisation of the EU, European Identity and National EU Discourses 3. Methodology and Research Design 4. France: The Discourse 5 Germany: The Discourse 6. The discourses in comparison 7. The Contexts in comparison 8. EU politicisation, EU democratisation, and EU identity: What to learn from the 2005 discourses?

Biography

Claudia Wiesner is Jean Monnet Chair and Professor of Political Science at Fulda University of Applied Sciences, as well as adjunct Professor in Political Science at Jyväskylä University (Finland).

"The volume develops a sophisticated analysis of the partly contradictory processes of politicisation, democratisation and identity formation in the EU. It provides a new research perspective to the discourses related to the ratification of the EU Consitutitonal Treaty in 2005, showing how national discourses shape European identity. It is a must read to anyone interested in EU politics and the democratisation of the EU."
Niilo Kauppi, University of Helsinki and CNRS

"Wiesner’s historically informed and theoretically stimulating account of European identity construction has a good potential to advance to a new master framework for the study of European integration and its intrinsic relationship to state and democracy transformation in Europe and beyond. Drawing principally on case studies from France and Germany, the book argues for a multi-level analysis of European identity formation that unites studies on political mobilisation and politicisation of the EU in the member states with studies of democratisation and constitutionaliastion of EU institutions and decision-making. Despite recent backsliding such as the case of Brexit or the salience of Euroscepticism, such a longitudinal analysis is helpful to outline the contours of a new type of political entity, where micro dynamics of bottom-up mobilisation in support and opposition of European integration meet with macro-dynamics of democratic identity formation."
Hans-Jörg Trenz, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa