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ID160615
Title ProperBreaking with Europe’s pasts: memory, reconciliation, and ontological (In)security
LanguageENG
AuthorRumelili, Bahar
Summary / Abstract (Note)The European Union is widely credited for consolidating a democratic “security community” in Europe, and bringing about a definitive break with war-torn and authoritarian/totalitarian pasts in many European countries. Drawing on recent discussions in ontological security studies, this article points out that these radical breaks may have come at the expense of ontological insecurity at the societal and individual levels in Europe. While conventional teleological narratives often treat reconciliation and breaking with the past as automatic by-products of European integration, ontological security theory calls for greater attention to the societal tensions and anxieties triggered by these transformations and how they are being managed –more or less successfully – through reconciliation dynamics and memory politics in different societal settings. Illustrating the variation in a number of cases, this article claims that a systematic comparative analysis of the different dynamics of reconciliation and memory politics in different European societies is central to analyzing European integration from an ontological security perspective.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Security Vol. 27, No.3; Sep 2018: p.280-295
Journal SourceEuropean Security Vol: 27 No 3
Key WordsReconciliation ;  EU ;  Europe ;  Memory ;  Security community ;  Ontological (in)Security


 
 
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