Abstract
Between The European Elections of June 1989 and those of June 1994, the voters had to digest an extraordinary diet of change. The cold war ended, leading to the unification of Germany and replacing one monolithic security problem by a diversity of problems, including, most agonizingly, Bosnia. The Soviet Union disintegrated. Recession brought unemployment above 10 per cent for the European Union as a whole. Many were bemused by the complexity of the Maastricht Treaty and the political conflicts engendered by some of its major elements. Foremost among these was the project for the single currency, promoted by France in order to anchor Germany yet more firmly in the Union. The idea of a ‘common defence’ as a backbone for the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) also had this motivation.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science
Reference2 articles.
1. ‘Das neue Europäische Parlament: mehr Vielfalt – weniger Handlungifahigkeit?’;Hrbek;Integration
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