Synopses & Reviews
The EU's eastern enlargement has coincided with a decade of rapid progress toward closer European integration. Poole argues that this enlargement, more than any previous one, is closely linked with major EU projects of integration, including justice and home affairs, monetary union, a common foreign and security policy, and the effort to create a constitutional treaty. By requiring the eastern states to adopt extensive reforms in their judicial and police systems, the enlargement process makes it easier for the EU to combat terrorism and organized crime and control the flow of immigration from outside Europe.
The monetary union was deliberately put in place before enlargement (which might have made the task more difficult), but now the Stability and Growth Pact requires reform to make it flexible enough to serve a larger, more diverse Union. The addition of ten new states provides one of the main incentives for drafting a constitutional treaty. Finally, the candidate countries are helping to lay the groundwork for the next EU enlargement into southeastern Europe. As the first college text to explore the impact of the eastern enlargement on European integration, this book can be used effectively in comparative government, economics, European history, and international relations courses.
Synopsis
The EU's eastern enlargement has coincided with a decade of rapid progress toward closer European integration. Poole argues that this enlargement, more than any previous one, is closely linked with major EU projects of integration, including justice and home affairs, monetary union, a common foreign and security policy, and the effort to create a constitutional treaty.
Synopsis
The EU's eastern enlargement has coincided with a decade of rapid progress toward closer European integration. Poole argues that this enlargement, more than any previous one, is closely linked with major EU projects of integration, including justice and home affairs, monetary union, a common foreign and security policy, and the effort to create a constitutional treaty.
Synopsis
Poole explores the global meaning of Europe's unification through the eastward expansion of the EU.
About the Author
PETER A. POOLE is a former Foreign Service Officer who has served in Brussels. He was the founding Director of the M.A. in International Studies at Old Dominion University and currently serves as an Instructor at George Mason University's Learning in Retirement Institute. Among his earlier books are Eight Presidents and Indochina (1988) and Profiles in American Foreign Policy (1981).
Table of Contents
Enlargement and Integration
The Pattern of Previous Enlargements
The Eastern Enlargement: Politics and Process
Poland Joins the EU
Economic Leaders: Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Slovenia
Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania
Romania and Bulgaria: Seeking to Stabilize Southeastern Europe
Reforming Agricultural and Regional Policy
Treaty of Nice: Essential Reforms
Enlargement and the Euro
Immigration and Enlargement
Justice and Home Affairs
Enlargement and the EU's Security and Defense Policy
Looking Beyond the Eastern Enlargement
Illustrations
Abbreviations
Appendix: Speech by Joschka Fischer, "From Confederacy to Federation"
Bibliography
Index