Autore |
König Thomas
|
Pubbl/distr/stampa |
2006
|
Descrizione fisica |
1 online resource (330 p.)
|
Disciplina |
342.24
|
Collana |
Routledge/ECPR studies in European political science
|
Soggetto topico |
Constitutional law - European Union countries
|
ISBN |
1-134-17335-0
1-134-17336-9
1-280-62084-6
9786610620845
0-203-96580-9
|
Classificazione |
POL000000POL010000POL040000
|
Formato |
Materiale a stampa  |
Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione |
eng
|
Nota di contenuto |
Book Cover; Half-Title; Series-Title; Title; Copyright; Contents; Figures; Tables; About the contributors; Series editor's preface; Abbreviations; Introduction; 1 The European Convention and the Rome and Brussels IGCs: A veto players analysis; 2 The European Convention: Consensus without unity?; 3 Austria: The coordination of the national position regarding the constitution; 4 Belgium, the Convention and the IGC: Consensus and coalition politics; 5 Cyprus: Under the shadow of the inter-communal conflict; 6 The Czech Republic: Sitting on the fence
7 Denmark: The Nordic model as an effort to bridge elite Euro-optimism and popular Euro-skepticism8 Estonia: A single voice in Europe's intergovernmental bargaining; 9 Finland: Centralized consensus on EU constitution building; 10 France: The President takes all; 11 Germany: The promoter of European integration?; 12 Greece: Overcoming negative stereotyping; 13 Hungary: United in support, divided by borders; 14 Ireland: Pragmatism and the EU constitution; 15 Italy: The presidency at work?; 16 Latvia and the EU constitution: A pragmatic "yes"; 17 Lithuania: A priority for Europe
18 Luxembourg, the Convention and the IGC: Consensus and concern for its economy19 Malta: The importance of being unimportant; 20 The Netherlands: Domestic preference formation on the European constitution; 21 Poland: The struggle for Nice; 22 Portugal: Quest for a new role; 23 Slovakia: Avoiding conflict to secure stability; 24 Slovenia: Consensus, integration and the protection of identity; 25 Spain: Preference formation and European constitution building; 26 Sweden's "third way" toward the EU constitution: Promoting social policies and safeguarding neutrality
27 The United Kingdom: Position taking and the protection of red lines28 The Commission, the Convention and the IGC: Consensus and concern for its role; 29 The European Parliament: Consensus and coordination for enhanced powers; Conclusion; Appendix 1: Questions employed and results of factor analysis; Appendix 2: The measure of adapted coherence for the evaluation of experts; Bibliography; Index
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Record Nr. | UNINA-9910765818003321 |