This book analyses core-periphery relations to highlight the growing cleavage, and potential conflict, between the core and peripheral member-states of the Union in the face of the devastating consequences of Eurozone crisis. This text will be of key interest to students and scholars of European Union studies, European integration, political economy, public policy, and comparative politics.
1. The European Union as a dualist economy : Understanding core-periphery relations PART I: Theoretical Perspectives 2. Core-periphery dynamics in the euro area: From conflict to cleavage? 3. The Centre-periphery divide in the eurocrisis: A theoretical approach PART II: Comparative Approaches 4. National interests and differentiated integration In The EU under crisis conditions: The cases of Germany, France and Britain 5. Will the centre hold? Germany, Ireland and Slovakia and the crisis of the European project 6. From 'superficial' to 'forced' Europeanization in southern Europe: The lack of ownership of national reforms 7. Sociopolitical divisions in the European Union: Discourses of southern European representatives in the European institutions 8. The increasing core-periphery divide and the new member states: Diverging from the European Union's mainstream developments 9. The southern and eastern peripheries of Europe: Is convergence a lost cause? PART III: Country Studies on the Political Management of the Troika Adjustment Programmes and the Sovereign Debt Crisis 10. Greece and the Troika in the context of the eurozone crisis 11. Confronting interrelated crises in the EU's western periphery: Steering Ireland-EU relations back to the centre 12. Portugal is a 'good pupil of the European Union'. Living under the regime of the Troika 13. Cyprus: The Troika's new approach to resolving A financial crisis In a eurozone member state 14. The politics of troika avoidance: The case of Spain 15. Italy Between Trasformismo And Transformative Europe PART IV: Case Studieson the Impact of the Crisis on Non-Eurozones Member-States in the Periphery 16. The Hungarian agony over eurozone accession 17. Peripheries, or perhaps already the centre? The impact of ten years of membership in the European Union on the position and perceptions of Poland PART V: The Global Dimension 18. From core to periphery? The impact of The crisis on the EU's role in the world 19. The undermining of 'Global Europe'? The impact of the eurozone crisis on third country perceptions of the European Union
José M. Magone is Professor of Regional and Global Governance at the Berlin School of Economics and Law.
Brigid Laffan is Director and Professor at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, and Director of the Global Governance Programme, European University Institute (EUI), Florence.
Christian Schweiger is Senior Lecturer in the School of Government and International Affairs at Durham University.