Europe - Toward 2001
Başlık:
Europe - Toward 2001
ISBN:
9781461312574
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 1996.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1996.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
XII, 380 p. online resource.
Series:
International Studies in Economics and Econometrics ; 35
Contents:
One: The Political and Institutional Dimensions -- 1 The Background to Institutional Reform -- 2 The Regional Dimension -- Two: The Economic Dimension -- 3 Competition versus Monopoly -- 4 Reforming Agriculture -- 5 Europe's Economic Position in the World -- Three: An Economic and MonetaryUnion -- 6 The Feasibility of an EMU -- 7 Strategies for an EMU -- Four: Justice, Rights of Citizens and Social Policy -- 8 Justice in the Letter and the Spirit: Accessibility to the Courts -- 9 The Schengen Agreement -- 10 Migration -- 11 Welfare and Worker Representation -- Five; The Military Dimension -- 12 Existing Military Arrangements -- 13 Possible Future Military Options -- Six; A Common Foreign Policy -- 14 Present Foreign Policy Arrangements and Weapons -- 15 Policies for Central and Eastern Europe -- 16 A Unified or an À La Carte Foreign Policy? -- Seven: The Intergovernmental Conference of 1996 -- 17 The National Proposals -- 18 The Proposals and Observations of the Institutions -- Conclusions The Future -- Appendices.
Abstract:
THEBACKGROUND Why a book on Europe - Toward the Year 200l? There are two principal reasons why a European should embark upon such a hazardous enterprise. First, when the Treaty on European Union (popularly known as the Maastricht Treaty, and, hereafter referred to as the Treaty in this introduction) was signed in February 1992, it was agreed that the heads of government of the EU Member States would assemble, in 1996, to examine its workings. This meeting will be known as the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC). Second, by the end of the century, it is certain that arrangements will have been made for the admission of some countries of Central and Eastern Europe into the European Union (EU). Consequently, even with or without the holding of the IGC, it will be urgently necessary to reform some of the Community's policies - notably the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and the structural poliCies which are linked, for example, 2 Europe - Toward 2001 with the Regional and Social Funds - before these countries become members. Failure to do this could result in bankruptcy for the EU. Of almost equal importance is the reform of the institutions and the actual workings of the Community. Already with 12 Member States, it was difficult enough to manage things on a daily basis. Now, as more countries join the Union, things could literally grind to a stop. Thus, changes in this area are indispensable.
Ek Kurum Yazarı:
Dil:
English