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Journal article 1343 views

Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West

Robert Bideleux

Perspectives on European Politics and Society, Volume: 10, Issue: 1, Pages: 3 - 16

Swansea University Author: Robert Bideleux

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Abstract

This article reappraises key features and implications of the EU supranational civil legal order, a civil association which now encompasses over 500 million Europeans (about two-thirds of Europe’s inhabitants, depending on how Europe is delimited). This new order has greatly enhanced security, stabi...

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Published in: Perspectives on European Politics and Society
ISSN: 1570-5854 1568-0258
Published: 2009
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa13134
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spelling 2011-10-01T00:00:00.0000000 v2 13134 2012-10-29 Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West c3b880aac6e4c2a1536185702a45d443 Robert Bideleux Robert Bideleux true false 2012-10-29 FGHSS This article reappraises key features and implications of the EU supranational civil legal order, a civil association which now encompasses over 500 million Europeans (about two-thirds of Europe’s inhabitants, depending on how Europe is delimited). This new order has greatly enhanced security, stability, calculability, and the scope and incentives for the peaceful and profitable coexistence of a great multiplicity of peoples with widely differing cultures, values and belief-systems, while greatly reducing the scope for mutual impairment, friction and violent conflict. The unique EU supranational legal order is the bedrock of this rule-governed order. Even though the EU exhibits widely publicized 'democratic deficits' at the supranational level, it has nevertheless established a framework which has helped to strengthen, entrench and increase the efficacy of liberal democracy, the rule of law, civil rights, civil liberties, and relatively liberal forms of capitalism and civil society at the state and sub-state levels. The article goes on to emphasizes the fluidity, indeterminacy, ambiguities and open-endedness of this emerging civil order in Europe, and the roles it has played in the reconfiguration of Europe’s East-West and North-South relations. This continually evolving order is unparalleled either in Europe's past or in other parts of the world, yet it does not represent the acting out or unfolding of a preordained plan, teleology or script – like the USA, it has actually developed into an entity quite different from what its ‘founding fathers’ originally envisaged. It has had a transformative impact on East Central European, Baltic and Balkan post-Communist states and their positions within the wider European order. This is still dominated by West European states, but the position of Europe’s smallest, poorest and weakest states is nevertheless much more secure and on a much more equal footing than in all previous European orders, in which military might was right and simply rode roughshod over the small, the poor and the weak. Journal Article Perspectives on European Politics and Society 10 1 3 16 1570-5854 1568-0258 Civil order, rules of conduct, vertical versus horizontal power-relations, EU, Russia, Commonwealth of Independent States 30 4 2009 2009-04-30 10.1080/15705850802699953 COLLEGE NANME Humanities and Social Sciences - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGHSS Swansea University 2011-10-01T00:00:00.0000000 2012-10-29T04:55:28.6940162 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Politics, Philosophy and International Relations Robert Bideleux 1
title Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West
spellingShingle Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West
Robert Bideleux
title_short Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West
title_full Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West
title_fullStr Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West
title_full_unstemmed Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West
title_sort Reconstituting Political Order in Europe, East and West
author_id_str_mv c3b880aac6e4c2a1536185702a45d443
author_id_fullname_str_mv c3b880aac6e4c2a1536185702a45d443_***_Robert Bideleux
author Robert Bideleux
author2 Robert Bideleux
format Journal article
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publishDate 2009
institution Swansea University
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doi_str_mv 10.1080/15705850802699953
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department_str School of Culture and Communication - Politics, Philosophy and International Relations{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Politics, Philosophy and International Relations
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description This article reappraises key features and implications of the EU supranational civil legal order, a civil association which now encompasses over 500 million Europeans (about two-thirds of Europe’s inhabitants, depending on how Europe is delimited). This new order has greatly enhanced security, stability, calculability, and the scope and incentives for the peaceful and profitable coexistence of a great multiplicity of peoples with widely differing cultures, values and belief-systems, while greatly reducing the scope for mutual impairment, friction and violent conflict. The unique EU supranational legal order is the bedrock of this rule-governed order. Even though the EU exhibits widely publicized 'democratic deficits' at the supranational level, it has nevertheless established a framework which has helped to strengthen, entrench and increase the efficacy of liberal democracy, the rule of law, civil rights, civil liberties, and relatively liberal forms of capitalism and civil society at the state and sub-state levels. The article goes on to emphasizes the fluidity, indeterminacy, ambiguities and open-endedness of this emerging civil order in Europe, and the roles it has played in the reconfiguration of Europe’s East-West and North-South relations. This continually evolving order is unparalleled either in Europe's past or in other parts of the world, yet it does not represent the acting out or unfolding of a preordained plan, teleology or script – like the USA, it has actually developed into an entity quite different from what its ‘founding fathers’ originally envisaged. It has had a transformative impact on East Central European, Baltic and Balkan post-Communist states and their positions within the wider European order. This is still dominated by West European states, but the position of Europe’s smallest, poorest and weakest states is nevertheless much more secure and on a much more equal footing than in all previous European orders, in which military might was right and simply rode roughshod over the small, the poor and the weak.
published_date 2009-04-30T03:15:03Z
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