ID | 134268 |
Title Proper | Paradox of integration |
Other Title Information | European democracy and the debt crisis |
Language | ENG |
Author | Macartney, Huw |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Europe is facing both a political crisis of democracy and legitimacy and an economic crisis of debt and competitiveness. These crises seem to point in two distinct directions, growing social unrest over the Europeanized mechanisms of economic adjustment, and increasing efforts at strengthening those same institutions that regulate the adjustment process. Recent analyses have suggested that this failure of democracy will prove decisive; legitimacy for crisis management efforts requires a redemocratization of the European polity. Instead, drawing on an analysis of ordo- and neo-liberal traditions, the article explains how European integration was itself a response to the perceived threat of democratic demands at the domestic level. The body of the article then traces the crisis through three phases, arguing that efforts by state managers reflect a deliberate attempt to depoliticize policy-making processes. Yet the selective intervention—to restore accumulation whilst withdrawing social spending—has only fuelled the politicization of segments of European society. This threatens to test the limits of depoliticization as a governing strategy. |
`In' analytical Note | Cambridge Review of International Affairs Vol.27, No.3; Sep.2014: p.401-423 |
Journal Source | Cambridge Review of International Affairs Vol: 27 No 3 |
Standard Number | Democracy |