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Enlargement and the Historical Origins of the European Community's Democratic Identity, 1961–1978
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Abstract
This article examines how and when democracy entered the discursive politics of the European Community to become one of the fundamental tenets of European political identity – and in the process influenced how decision-makers approached the question of enlargement. Building on multiple archival sources, the article traces how all three Community institutions (Commission, Council and European Parliament) legitimised the expansion and continuation of the process of European integration through the discursive construction of democracy. It focuses on the debates elicited by the attempts of southern European countries to accede to the EEC in the 1960s and 1970s.
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- Contemporary European History , Volume 25 , Special Issue 3: European Integration , August 2016 , pp. 439 - 458
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016
References
1 For a discussion of how today's European Union has progressively appropriated the discursive space of ‘Europe’ see Hermann, Richard, Risse-Kappen, Thomas and Brewer, Marilynn, Transnational Identities – Becoming European in the EU (New York: Rowan and Littlefield, 2004)Google Scholar. Although this is not the focus of this article, it is possible to trace how EEC actors slowly started to build the equation of ‘Europe’ with their own institutions over the course of the first two decades of its existence. See also De Angelis, Emma, ‘The European Parliament's Identity Discourse and Eastern Europe, 1974–2004’, Journal of European Integration History, 17,1 (2011), 103–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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3 The concept of identity is subject to on-going scrutiny and debate across a variety of disciplines – with ‘European identity’ alternatively being approached as an identity created by political leaders, one identified by scholars across centuries of historical and cultural developments or the identification with ‘Europe’ and/or the EU among specific communities. The literature is vast but some examples include Bruter, Michael, Citizens of Europe? The Emergence of a Mass European Identity (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Strath, Bo, Europe and the Other and Europe as Other (Brussels: PIE Lang, 2001)Google Scholar; Checkel, Jeffrey T and Katzenstein, Peter J, European Identity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008)Google Scholar; Herrmann, Risse and Brewer, eds., Transnational Identities; Delanty, Gerard, Inventing Europe: Idea, Identity, Reality (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 1995)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Eder, Klaus, ‘A Theory of Collective Identity. Making Sense of the Debate on a “European Identity”’, European Journal of Social Theory, 12,4 (2009), 427–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
4 In the 1970s European actors often grouped Spain and Portugal together whenever the issue of ‘democracy’ and political practices was under scrutiny. In spite of the obvious differences, the treatment of the political identity question was remarkably similar across the three countries – being the first country to go through the process, Greece was also the one that first gave rise to questions about the political dimensions of enlargement. Much of what follows will therefore focus on Greece as a key case study.
5 Conclusions of the Sessions of the European Council, 1975–1990, Copenhagen 7–8 Apr 1978, Archive of European Integration, University of Pittsburgh.
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13 Willi Birkelbach, Report on behalf of the Political Affairs Committee on the political and institutional aspects of accession or association to the Community, 15 Jan. 1962, European Parliamentary Assembly (hereafter EPA), Documents de Séance, Doc. 122. Rapporteur Willi Birkelbach was a member of the German Social Democratic Party and hence of the Socialist Group within the EP.
14 Ibid.
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18 See for instance Jean Pierre Duvieusart, Christian Democrat, Belgium, EPA, Débats, Aspects politiques et institutionnels de l'adhésion ou de l'association à la Communauté, 23 Jan. 1962; Fernand Dehousse, Socialist, Belgium, EPA, Débats, Aspects politiques et institutionnels de l'adhésion ou de l'association à la Communauté, 23 Jan. 1962.
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29 Edoardo Martino, Christian Democrat, Italy, EPA, Débats, Question orale n. 4/67 avec débat relative a l'association CEE-Grèce, 8 May 1967. Martino, a former partisan and a member of the European Parliament since 1958, was Chair of the Political Committee between 1964 and 1967 and would then be commissioner for external affairs in the Rey Commission.
30 Wilhelmus Schuijt, Christian Democrat, Netherlands, EPA, Débats, Question orale n. 4/67 avec débat relative a l'association CEE-Gréce, 8 May 1967. Schujit was president of the Committee of Association with Greece.
31 EPA, Débats, Question orale n. 4/67 avec débat relative a l'association CEE-Grèce, 8 May 1967.
32 Walter Faller was a German member of the socialist group. Cornelis Berkhouver was a Dutch member of the European Parliament from 1964 to 1984. A member of the Dutch People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie), he was chair of the liberal and democratic group from February 1970 to March 1973 and President of the EP between March 1973 and March 1975; Cornelis Berkhouwer, Liberal and Democratic Group, Netherlands, EPA, Débats. Question orale n. 4/67 avec débat relative à l'association CEE-Grèce, 8 May 1967.
33 Résolution sur l'association entre la C.E.E. et la Grèce, EPA, Débats, 11 May 1967, Association CEE-Gréce. The resolution was approved by all party groups.
34 Note for Jean Rey, Brussels, 30 May 1967, Historical Archives of the European Union, Florence, Edoardo Martino Files (hereafter EM) 76.
35 Minutes of Council of Ministers, Brussels, 5 June 1967, EM 77; Study on the Strategic Situation in the Mediterranean due to Increased Presence of Soviet Fleet, Athens, 13 Feb. 1968, Historical Archive of Greek Foreign Ministry [hereafter HAFGM], Athens, London Embassy Series, 1968, N2324–45; Maragkou, Konstantina, ‘Favouritism in NATO's South-Eastern Flank: The Case of the Greek Colonels, 1967–74’, Cold War History, 9, 3 (2009), 347CrossRefGoogle Scholar–66; Miller, The United States, 157–61.
36 Meeting between Stavros Roussos and Jean Rey, Brussels, 7 Nov 1968, EM 79; Keys, Barbara, ‘Anti-Torture Politics: Amnesty International, the Greek Junta, and the Origins of the US Human Rights Boom’, in Iriye, Akira, Goedde, Petra and Hitchcock, William, eds., The Human Rights Revolution: An International History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 201Google Scholar–23.
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39 See Jean Rey, EPA, Débats, 20 Sep 1967, Débat sur la déclaration de M. le President de la Commission des Communautés Européennes.
40 Bulletin Europe Information on Greece and the European Community, Brussels, 14/78, 3
41 Report for E. Martino, Brussels, 5 May 1968, EM 78.
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85 Report by É. Noël, La Roche, 17 Sept., EN 48.
86 Meeting of COREPER, Brussels, 22 Mar. 1978, MWE04/8, 63D, FCO 30/3874.
87 Meeting of European Council, Copenhagen, 8 Apr. 1978, MWE021/2, 256, FCO 30/3862.
88 Note by G. Exarxos, Brussels, 7 Jan. 1978, CKP 0178.
89 Kalypso Nicolaidis and Rachel Kleinfeld, ‘Rethinking Europe's Rule of Law and Enlargement Agenda: The Fundamental Dilemma’, Jean Monnet Working Paper, 12 Dec. 2012, 1–93.
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