This book calls for a philosophical consideration of the development, challenges and successes of the European Union. The author argues that conceptual innovation is essential if progress on the European project is to be made; new meanings, rather than financial or institutional engineering solutions, will help solve the crisis. By applying a philosophical approach to diagnosing the EU crisis, the book reconsiders the basic concepts of democracy in the context of the complex reality of the EU and the globalised world where profound social and political changes are taking place. It will be of interest to students and scholars interested in EU politics, political theory and philosophy.
1. Introduction: Understanding European Complexity.- Part 1: Legitimacy Problems in Europe.- 2. Deficit of What? A Typology of the Legitimacy Problems in the EU.- 3. Whose Deficit? The European Democracy and its Democracies.- Part 2: The Complexity of the European Democracy.- 4. What Should Be Democratised? The Peculiarity of Democracy in Europe.- 5. Who Are We? A Democracy Without Demos.- 6. On Behalf of Whom? The Multiple Representation of Europeans.- 7. What’s New? The Political Innovation of the European Union.- Part 3: A Truly Common Europe.- 8. In Whose Benefit? The European Construction of the Common.- 9. How Much Social? The European Deficit of Justice.- 10. Who Decides? Transnational Self-Determination.- 11. Conclusion: What Can We Hope? The European Promises after Its Crisis.
“In his wonderful book, Daniel Innerarity reminds us that government and democracy beyond the state is a complex affair if we are not simply to reproduce the national model. And in doing so he manages to make the EU’s complexity simple and its current predicament solvable. A feat!” (Professor Kalypso Nicolaïdis, University of Oxford, UK)
“Europe needs theory, or rather political philosophy. Given this provocative premise, Daniel Innerarity develops a brilliant argument aimed at overcoming the crisis of the European Union. We need a new narrative capable of taking up the challenge, posed by Europe, to rethink democracy in its complexity, beyond the nation-state model.” (Professor Elena Pulcini, University of Florence, Italy)
“The project of European integration has been pursued without an agreed identification of its finalitè. When crises exploded, European leaders did not know how to deal with them. In Brussels, their strategy was muddling-through, in national capitals their narrative was TINA (there is no alternative). The “bicycle approach” to European integration continues to be the unofficial philosophy of the EU. As Daniel Innerarity argues persuasively in this book, it is time to go beyond a mere ‘processual’ view of the EU. The question is not the depth of the integration but the quality of European democracy.” (Sergio Fabbrini, Director of the LUISS School of Government, Rome, Italy)
“Discussions of the state of the EU across all sub-disciplines of “European studies” are increasingly characterised by irritated signals of helplessness. What Europe needs at its core is a theoretical moment extensive enough to give an indication of its future. Innerarity’s political philosophy excels through its synthesising of technically detailed and theoretical innovative reconstructions of present impasses; reconstructions which reveal encouraging and democratically legitimate potential.” (Professor Christian Joerges, Hertie School of Governance, Germany)
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Daniel Innerarity is Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country and the Ikerbasque Foundation for Science, Spain, and Professor in the School of Transnational Governance, European University Institute of Florence, Italy.