From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State?

Thesis advisor: James Cronin === In 1957, the Treaty of Rome was signed by six West European states to create the European Economic Community (EEC). Designed to foster a common internal market for a limited amount of industrial goods and to define a customs union within the Six, it did not at the t...

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Main Author: Moloney, Peter
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3797
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1015112019-05-10T07:33:58Z From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State? Moloney, Peter Thesis advisor: James Cronin Text thesis 2014 Boston College English electronic application/pdf In 1957, the Treaty of Rome was signed by six West European states to create the European Economic Community (EEC). Designed to foster a common internal market for a limited amount of industrial goods and to define a customs union within the Six, it did not at the time particularly stand out among contemporary international organizations. However, by 1992, within the space of a single generation, this initially limited trade zone had been dramatically expanded into the world's largest trade bloc and had pooled substantial sovereignty among its member states on a range of core state responsibilities. Most remarkably, this transformation resulted from a thoroughly novel political experiment that combined traditional interstate cooperation among its growing membership with an unprecedented transfer of sovereignty to centralized institutions. Though still lacking the traditional institutions and legitimacy of a fully-fledged state, in many policy areas, the European Union (EU) that emerged in 1992 was nonetheless collectively a global force. My dissertation argues that the organization's unprecedented transfer of national sovereignty challenged the very definition of the modern European state and its function. In structure and ambition, it represented far more than just a regional trade bloc among independent states: it became a unique political entity that effectively remodelled the fundamental blueprint of the conventional European state structure familiar to scholars for generations. How did such a dramatic transformation happen so quickly? I argue that three forces in particular were at play: the external pressures of globalization, the search for a new Western European and German identity within the Cold War world and the often unintended consequences of the interaction between member state governments and the Community's supranational institutions. In particular, I examine the history of the EEC's monetary union, common foreign policy, common social policy and the single market to explain the impact of the above forces of change on the EEC's rapid transformation. Commission of the EU European Community European Court of Justice European Monetary Union European Union Treaty on European Union Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2014. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: History. 415697 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3797
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Commission of the EU
European Community
European Court of Justice
European Monetary Union
European Union
Treaty on European Union
spellingShingle Commission of the EU
European Community
European Court of Justice
European Monetary Union
European Union
Treaty on European Union
Moloney, Peter
From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State?
description Thesis advisor: James Cronin === In 1957, the Treaty of Rome was signed by six West European states to create the European Economic Community (EEC). Designed to foster a common internal market for a limited amount of industrial goods and to define a customs union within the Six, it did not at the time particularly stand out among contemporary international organizations. However, by 1992, within the space of a single generation, this initially limited trade zone had been dramatically expanded into the world's largest trade bloc and had pooled substantial sovereignty among its member states on a range of core state responsibilities. Most remarkably, this transformation resulted from a thoroughly novel political experiment that combined traditional interstate cooperation among its growing membership with an unprecedented transfer of sovereignty to centralized institutions. Though still lacking the traditional institutions and legitimacy of a fully-fledged state, in many policy areas, the European Union (EU) that emerged in 1992 was nonetheless collectively a global force. My dissertation argues that the organization's unprecedented transfer of national sovereignty challenged the very definition of the modern European state and its function. In structure and ambition, it represented far more than just a regional trade bloc among independent states: it became a unique political entity that effectively remodelled the fundamental blueprint of the conventional European state structure familiar to scholars for generations. How did such a dramatic transformation happen so quickly? I argue that three forces in particular were at play: the external pressures of globalization, the search for a new Western European and German identity within the Cold War world and the often unintended consequences of the interaction between member state governments and the Community's supranational institutions. In particular, I examine the history of the EEC's monetary union, common foreign policy, common social policy and the single market to explain the impact of the above forces of change on the EEC's rapid transformation. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2014. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: History.
author Moloney, Peter
author_facet Moloney, Peter
author_sort Moloney, Peter
title From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State?
title_short From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State?
title_full From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State?
title_fullStr From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State?
title_full_unstemmed From Common Market to European Union: Creating a New Model State?
title_sort from common market to european union: creating a new model state?
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3797
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