Cosmopolitan Government in Europe

Regular price €186.00
A01=Owen Parker
Author_Owen Parker
Category=JPA
Category=KCP
Civil Society
Common Language
constitutional patriotism
Contemporary EU
Cosmopolitan Government
Cosmopolitan Rationality
EEC Treaty
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
EU Citizen
EU Level
EU's Enlargement Policy
EU's Legitimacy
European integration ethics
European Level Government
European Studies
EU’s Enlargement Policy
EU’s Legitimacy
Foucauldian political theory
Foucault
Governmentality
Habermasian Discourse Ethic
Historico Political Discourse
International Political Economy
Interventions
Legal Cosmopolitan
liberal governmentality
Market Cosmopolitan
Parker
Part Iii
pluralist democracy Europe
Polish Plumber
postnational governance
Postnational Politics
resistance in European political structures
SGP
SGP Reform
SGP Rule
Social Democratic Achievement
Social EU
Turkey's EU Bid
Turkey’s EU Bid

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415519281
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Aug 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The invocation of ‘the market’ has been omnipresent in media discussions of ‘crisis Europe’. On the one hand, ‘the market’ is presented as that to which EU member states must collectively respond. It is the very purpose of a post-national government and that which dictates individual and collective identities. The expansion of market is that which guarantees and constitutes peace in Europe. On the other hand, ‘the market’ is that which government must seek to tame. It is the servant of government and ought not be permitted to undermine collective identities and solidarities associated with the juridical imaginary of social contract and sovereign nation-state. It is, from this perspective, the expansion of the social institutions of nation-state into the post-national arena that will constitute a lasting peace in Europe.

Cosmopolitan Government in Europe uses a Foucauldian lens to consider the ethics of the scholarly and institutional discourses associated with these apparently divergent market and legal cosmopolitan visions of Europe. It reflects on attempts to reconcile or move beyond these discourses, particularly through the invocation of more pluralist modes of governance, but claims that such moves have been largely unsuccessful in both practice and theory. It argues that the very ambiguity in the relationship between the ideal subjects that these market and legal visions promote – respectively, post-national ‘entrepreneur’ and ‘citizen’ – is that which permits a space for resistance and politics. Thus, the book argues for a pragmatic politics which is cognizant of the violent potential inherent in any cosmopolitan attempt to govern Europe, while recognising the contemporary dangers associated with the dominance of a market cosmopolitan Europe.

This work is an important and timely intervention in contemporary debates about democratic Europe and its shortcomings and will be of great interest to scholars of international political theory, European studies and international political economy.

Owen Parker is a Lecturer in European politics at the University of Sheffield. His work addresses the governance of political economy, security and identity in the EU and has been published in such outlets as Journal of European Public Policy and Journal of Common Market Studies.