Image for European integration, 1950-2003: superstate or new market economy?

European integration, 1950-2003: superstate or new market economy?

See all formats and editions

Integration is the most significant European historical development in the past fifty years, eclipsing in importance even the collapse of the USSR.

Yet, until now, no satisfactory explanation is to be found in any single book as to why integration is significant, how it originated, how it has changed Europe, and where it is headed.

Professor Gillingham's work corrects the inadequacies of the existing literature by cutting through the genuine confusion that surrounds the activities of the European Union, and by looking at his subject from a truly historical perspective.

The late-twentieth century has been an era of great, though insufficiently appreciated, accomplishment that intellectually and morally is still emerging from the shadow of an earlier one of depression, and modern despotism.

This is a work, then, that captures the historical distinctiveness of Europe in a way that transcends current party political debate.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£145.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
110713319X / 9781107133198
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
940.55
02/06/2003
England
English
563 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.