Results 131 to 140 of about 3,962 (185)
Liberal Intergovernmentalism, spillover and supranational immigration policy
That the Lisbon Treaty lays the foundation for a supranational asylum and immigration policy is surprising, even more so for Liberal Intergovernmentalism (LI), whose founder Andrew Moravcsik predicts that no such development will take place. While the article uses LI as its point of departure, it shows that it runs into problems with regards to the ...
H. Andersson
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Evolution of CFSP in Terms of Liberal Intergovernmentalism [PDF]
We have to deal in this kind of interrogation with the tension between the intergovernmental approach on the EU and the federalist one; the first camp consists of people supporting the continuity of state sovereignty in the European space, while the other camp supports the gradual transfer of sovereignty at the super-state level, the EU being a result ...
Flavius Ionel Gaiantu
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Liberal Intergovernmentalism and the Crises of the European Union
AbstractThe Euro, Schengen and Brexit crises pose important explanatory challenges to liberal intergovernmentalism (LI). In contrast with the historical context in which LI originated, they have threatened existing integration regimes with disintegration in a highly politicized domestic environment. How relevant does LI remain under these circumstances
Frank Schimmelfennig
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Revisiting liberal intergovernmentalism in CFSP: preference formation and the EEAS
Liberal intergovernmentalism (LI) posits that member states’ preferences are domestically shaped and align with the positions of the largest states. However, during EEAS negotiations, major states had divergent views on Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) integration, risking nonagreement.
Paula Lamoso-González
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The aim of this paper is to determine whether British and German sea fisheries policies have been shaped by domestic factors or by European Union (EU) institutions. To achieve this aim, British and German perceptions of the EU's Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) were compared using two alternative theories of EU integration: Moravscik's Liberal ...
Craig McLean, Tim Gray
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Rational Institutionalism and Liberal Intergovernmentalism
Roger Scully
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Chapter 25. Explaining the Treaty of Nice: beyond Liberal Intergovernmentalism?
Finn Laursen Martinus
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2020
Liberal Intergovernmentalism (LI) is the contemporary “baseline” social scientific and historiographic theory of regional integration—especially as regards the European Union. It rests on three basic assumptions, which in turn support a three-stage theoretical model of integration and the elaboration of numerous distinctive causal mechanisms ...
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Liberal Intergovernmentalism (LI) is the contemporary “baseline” social scientific and historiographic theory of regional integration—especially as regards the European Union. It rests on three basic assumptions, which in turn support a three-stage theoretical model of integration and the elaboration of numerous distinctive causal mechanisms ...
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Wait, see and hope: Explaining crisis management in the framework of liberal intergovernmentalism
István Benczés
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Challenges to liberal intergovernmentalism
European Union Politics, 2012Slapin (2011) and Finke et al. (2012) represent the best theory-based book-length studies of the most active period of treaty reform in the history of the European Union – from the Treaty of Amsterdam to the Treaty of Lisbon. These works offer the opportunity to assess the extent to which liberal intergovernmentalism – a ‘baseline’ theory of regional ...
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