France and the Construction of Europe, 1944-2007
The Geopolitical Imperative
Inbunden, Engelska, 2007
2 889 kr
Finns i fler format (1)
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2007-12-01
- Mått152 x 229 x 26 mm
- Vikt712 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieBerghahn Monographs in French Studies
- Antal sidor366
- FörlagBerghahn Books
- ISBN9781845453930
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Michael Sutton is Professor Emeritus, Modern History and International Relations, at Aston University. He has written regularly on France for The Economist Intelligence Unit - part of The Economist newspaper group - since 1985, and worked in Brussels from 1973 to 1993 monitoring European Community developments. He is also a specialist in twentieth-century French political thought and philosophy.
- PrefaceAbbreviations and AcronymsIntroduction: De Gaulle’s ShadowPART I: THE POST-WAR ASSERTION OF LEADERSHIP IN CONTINENTAL WESTERN EUROPEChapter 1. Before the Schuman PlanEarlier Calls for European UnionThe Quest for Security and the Onset of the Cold WarWestern European Economic and Political CooperationWariness about the New West GermanyChapter 2. Pooling Coal and SteelThe Monnet InitiativeThe Schuman DeclarationForging the ECSC TreatyRatification and ImplementationChapter 3. German Rearmament and Military SecurityThe Pleven PlanThe Rejection of the EDC TreatyThe Paris AccordsThe Suez Crisis and its AftermathChapter 4. The Gaullist Vision of the Atlantic Alliance and European UnionAdenauer, the US, and the Berlin CrisisThe Failure of the Fouchet CommitteeA Rose and a Rose Garden‘Tous Azimuts’ and the Limits of DétentePART II: THE COMMON MARKET AND THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMYChapter 5. The Benelux Initiative and the Formation of the Common MarketMessina to VeniceNegotiating the EEC and EuratomDe Gaulle’s ‘Practising the Common Market’Securing Agricultural InterestsChapter 6. Moving from Dirigisme to Qualified Economic LiberalismThe Watering Down of Post-war DirigismeDelors and the Single MarketThe Reorientation of Foreign TradeGlobalisation and French HesitationsPART III: PRESERVING POWER AND SECURITY AFTER DE GAULLEChapter 7. European Political Integration up to the Cold War’s CloseThe Rapprochement with AlbionEchoes of the Fouchet ProposalsAmerica’s ‘Year of Europe’ and the Atlantic AllianceBack to the Elysée TreatyChapter 8. Opposition to German Monetary HegemonyThe Death of the Bretton Woods SystemThe Deutsche Mark as Anchor CurrencyThe EMS and its Ambivalent DesignThe Dictates of the ERM and French DissatisfactionChapter 9. Geopolitical Upheaval and the Maastricht TreatyMonetary Union Proposed from Paris and BonnFrance and the Fall of the Berlin WallThe Drive for German UnificationProviding a Treaty for European UnionChapter 10. Post-Yalta and Post-Maastricht EuropeImplementing EMU and ‘La Pensée Unique’The Yugoslav ImbroglioRethinking Security and DefenceThe European Union and the Other EuropeEpilogueBibliographyIndex
“Combining a rich array of secondary sources with a solid assortment of published primary sources such as memoirs and official papers, Sutton presents a highly detailed, interpretive account that represents a valuable contribution to our understanding of contemporary European history.” • The Historian“Michael Sutton’s admirable book is a very comprehensive and very well researched history of France’s European policy since 1944, including economic aspects. Going actually beyond its title, this volume covers most major aspects of French foreign policy, in a precise as well as readable way. This makes the book useful for students, but also for professional historians and the general public.” • Journal of Contemporary History“Michael Sutton has produced an eminently readable and strongly researched overall history of France’s tireless efforts in favor of ‘la construction européenne’… The book is a veritable tour de force and will long be cited as a primary reference on France’s tortuous relations with Europe.” •French Politics, Culture & Society“This fine survey of France’s role in European integration since World War II… covers the most significant negotiations on European integration from early postwar plans for regional customs unions to the abortive European Constitution. Students of France’s role in European politics will find it useful for several reasons… Sutton has succeeded admirably in making his case and presenting an exceptionally lucid account of several decades of complicated political and economic manouevre.” • H-Diplo“The book is highly impressive in its range, integrating such issues as the impact of the Cuban missile crisis into its account of Franco-American relations and the implications for France's position in Europe. It is also impressive in its command of intricate detail in the technical, economic sphere and in high-level negotiations, as well as in behind-the-scenes maneuvers taking place in parallel to more overt diplomacy.” • French Studies“Sutton's important work has the merit of making known a whole range of French historiography that, because of not being available in English translation, is not accessible to scholars who do not read French. At the same time, he brings together, in an original manner, the main results of historical research on the role of France in Europe, a theme that is of vital importance still today.” • Modern & Contemporary France“[The author] has written an excellent chronicle of the central episodes of European construction, from the invention of the ECSC to the Maastricht Treaty and beyond, keeping French initiatives, breakthroughs, and missteps clearly in view. He has also made the more recondite economic complexities of the story intelligible to general readers. As a result, Sutton has produced an important overview of European integration that highlights the influence French leaders exerted in building what by the 1990s had become the fundamental structures of the European Union we know today.” • H-France“Sutton has a feel both for the ongoing manoeuvres of the main protagonists and for the continuities of the broad picture. He keeps the context constantly in geopolitical focus, drawing upon a wide range of reliable secondary sources. [His] scrupulous study will allow both protagonists and antagonists to recognize why the European show is still on the road, but now arouses fears rather than hopes.” • European History Quarterly