Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’

Since becoming a member of the European Community in 1973, Denmark has conducted seven referenda on its involvement in the process of European integration. Five of the referenda have produced a ‘yes’ to accession and further integration while the remaining two have resulted in ‘noes’. The Danish app...

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Main Author: Thorsten Borring Olesen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2015-10-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/668
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spelling doaj-b6711753eea24006b025123495c873632020-11-25T04:10:30ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2015-10-01114Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’Thorsten Borring Olesen0Aarhus UniversitySince becoming a member of the European Community in 1973, Denmark has conducted seven referenda on its involvement in the process of European integration. Five of the referenda have produced a ‘yes’ to accession and further integration while the remaining two have resulted in ‘noes’. The Danish approach of using referenda, of claiming opt-outs after ‘noes’ and of setting up parliamentary controls to check government policy in Brussels has been a way of checking Europeanization - in this article termed ‘denmarkization’. For a long period, the two processes of Europeanization and denmarkization have co-existed and helped to create equilibrium and legitimacy behind Danish European policy. However, this seems to have changed lately as denmarkization by centre-right and populist parties no longer appears efficient in safeguarding Danish sovereignty in the vital welfare domain. This has provoked a situation in which Europeanization and denmarkization according to the interpretation of this article are heading for collision, which will necessitate some form of reconfiguration of Danish European policy. This article investigates and discusses this dual-faced aspect of the Danish membership experience and finally raises the question of whether this experience finds parallels in other EU member stateshttps://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/668Danish EU policyEuropeanizationintegrationeuro-scepticismfuture of EU
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thorsten Borring Olesen
spellingShingle Thorsten Borring Olesen
Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’
Journal of Contemporary European Research
Danish EU policy
Europeanization
integration
euro-scepticism
future of EU
author_facet Thorsten Borring Olesen
author_sort Thorsten Borring Olesen
title Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’
title_short Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’
title_full Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’
title_fullStr Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’
title_full_unstemmed Denmark in Europe 1973-2015: Processes of Europeanization and ‘Denmarkization’
title_sort denmark in europe 1973-2015: processes of europeanization and ‘denmarkization’
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Since becoming a member of the European Community in 1973, Denmark has conducted seven referenda on its involvement in the process of European integration. Five of the referenda have produced a ‘yes’ to accession and further integration while the remaining two have resulted in ‘noes’. The Danish approach of using referenda, of claiming opt-outs after ‘noes’ and of setting up parliamentary controls to check government policy in Brussels has been a way of checking Europeanization - in this article termed ‘denmarkization’. For a long period, the two processes of Europeanization and denmarkization have co-existed and helped to create equilibrium and legitimacy behind Danish European policy. However, this seems to have changed lately as denmarkization by centre-right and populist parties no longer appears efficient in safeguarding Danish sovereignty in the vital welfare domain. This has provoked a situation in which Europeanization and denmarkization according to the interpretation of this article are heading for collision, which will necessitate some form of reconfiguration of Danish European policy. This article investigates and discusses this dual-faced aspect of the Danish membership experience and finally raises the question of whether this experience finds parallels in other EU member states
topic Danish EU policy
Europeanization
integration
euro-scepticism
future of EU
url https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/668
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