Austria in the European Union

Regular price €42.99
Alexandra Friedrich
Aryanization Crimes
Austrian EU membership impact
Austrian Foreign Policy
Austrian National Consciousness
Austrian Penal Code
Austrian Political System
Austrian Postwar History
Austrian Welfare State
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Category=NHD
CIA's Activity
CIA’s Activity
Danubian Confederation
Demarcation Line
EC Social Policy
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ernst Hanisch
EU
EU Social Policy
European integration studies
European Works Councils
Fritz Plasser
Gerald Steinacher
German Government
GNter Bischof
Hans-Georg Betz
Heinrich Neisser
Holocaust memory discourse
Home Town
Jacques Le Rider
Johannes Pollak
Klaus Larres
Martin F. Polaschek
Michael G. Huelshoff
Michael Gehler
Nazi War Crimes
neutrality policy research
People's Courts
People’s Courts
political transition analysis
Postwar Austria
postwar justice systems
Reinhold GNer
Richard Mitten
right-wing populism Europe
Sabine Loitfellner
Siegfried Beer
Sonja Puntscher Riekmann
Thomas Angerer
Waldheim Affair
Walter Manoschek
War Criminals Act
War Time
West Germany
Winfried R. Garscha

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765808998
  • Weight: 498g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jan 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Austria joined the European Union in 1995, with the overwhelming support of its citizenry. In June 1994, a record 66.6 percent of the Austrian population voted in favor of joining the Union, and Austria acceded on January 1, 1995. Only three years later, in the second half of 1998, Austria assumed its first presidency of the European Union. Its competent conduct of the Union's business enhanced its reputation. The sense that Austria was a role model collapsed overnight, after a new conservative People's Party (iVP/FPi) coalition government was formed in Austria in early February 2000. Austria became Europe's nightmare.

This volume has two purposes. The first is to assess Austria's first five years in the European Union. The second is Austria's ongoing struggle with its past. Heinrich Neisser evaluates and assesses Austria's commitment to the European Union. Thomas Angerer offers a long-term perspective of regionalization and globalization trends in Austrian foreign affairs. Waldemar Hummer analyzes contradictions between Austrian neutrality and Europe's emerging common security policy. Johannes Pollak and Sonja Puntscher Rieckmann look at current debates over weighing future voting rights in the European Commission. Michael Huelshoff evaluates Austria's EU presidency in 1998 and compares it to the subsequent 1999 German presidency. Gerda Falkner examines the withering away of the previously much admired Austrian welfare state. Walter Manoschek scrutinizes the Nazi roots of Jorg Haider's Freedom Party. Michael Gehler critiques the EU sanctions and bemoans the absence of mediation through transnational Christian conservative parties.

In reviewing how Austria deals with World War II, Richard Mitten investigates discourses on victimhood in postwar Austria and the place of Jews in this process. A "Roundtable" presents overwhelming evidence of Austrians' deep involvement in Nazi war crimes, and includes articles by Sabine Loitfellner and Winfried Garscha. This addition to the Contemporary Austrian Studies series will be welcomed by political scientists, historians and legal scholars, particularly those with a strong interest in European affairs.

Gunter Bischof, Anton Pelinka, Michael Gehler