Abstract
The recent crises have tested the European Union to the extreme and Europeans have discovered, with frustration, the limits of European governance. The complexity of the latter has prevented the Union from speaking with one voice in response to concerns raised by the financial markets, its partners and its citizens.
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References
See Jean-François Jamet, L’Europe peut-elle se passer d’un gouvernement économique?, La documentation française, coll. Réflexe Europe — Débats, 2011.
Christian Hellwig and Thomas Philippon, “Eurobills, not Eurobonds”, voxeu.org, 2nd December 2011.
Jean-Claude Trichet, “Tomorrow and the day after tomorrow: a vision for Europe”, speech at the Humboldt University, Berlin, 24th October 2011.
See T. Chopin and J.-F. Jamet, “Europe and the Crisis: what are the possible outcomes? Collapse, status quo or the continuation of integration?”, European Issue — Robert Schuman Foundation, Policy Papers n. 219, 21 November 2011 as well as J.-F. Jamet and G. Klossa, Europe: la dernière chance?, Armand Colin, coll. Eléments de réponse, 2011.
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© 2012 Springer-Verlag France, Paris
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Chopin, T., Jamet, JF. (2012). Europe — Afterwards. From Crisis Federalism to Pragmatic Federalism. In: Schuman Report on Europe. Springer, Paris. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-2-8178-0319-7_2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-2-8178-0319-7_2
Publisher Name: Springer, Paris
Print ISBN: 978-2-8178-0318-0
Online ISBN: 978-2-8178-0319-7
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