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The Political Economy of European Security

The Political Economy of European Security

The Political Economy of European Security

Kaija Schilde, Boston University
January 2020
Available
Paperback
9781316648193

    What is the relationship between private actors and international institutions in global governance, as institutions such as the EU develop aspects of political authority once in the sole domain of nation states? Important areas of recent EU development have been immigration, security, and defense policies. Are these EU policies the result of strategic imperatives, or are they also driven by the political economy of markets? Kaija Schilde argues that answers require evaluating the EU in the comparative tradition of the political development of authority. Drawing on industry documents, interviews, interest group data, an original survey, and comparative political theory, The Political Economy of European Security demonstrates that interest groups can change the outcomes of developing political institutions because they provide sources of external capacity, which in turn can produce authority over time. In this way, the EU is like a developing state in its relationship with interest groups.

    • Includes original data tracing the mobilization and evolution of civil society and interest group lobbying activity from 1990 to 2010 in different EU policy areas over time
    • Theory is informed by frameworks of comparative political development outside of the EU
    • This book is free of EU specific policy jargon
    • Contains in-depth case research documenting the role of private actors in EU agenda setting, and broader insights on the growth of interest groups in Brussels and their effect on policy outcomes

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Kaija Schilde brings her critical insight and intellectual heft to the ever lasting question of how the EU responds to the demands of security. By looking at the political economy of European security, Schilde demonstrates the bargaining and trade-offs that have gone into policing, justice and home affairs and defence. Building on literature from political economics, European integration and security studies, this book sets out to uncover the building blocks of the EU as a security provider.' David Galbreath, Professor of International Security, University of Bath

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    Product details

    January 2020
    Paperback
    9781316648193
    306 pages
    230 × 152 × 16 mm
    0.45kg
    25 b/w illus. 5 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. The governing capacity of the European Union
    • 2. Mr. Smith goes to Brussels
    • 3. How Weberian is the EU?
    • 4. The political economy of European defense
    • 5. The political development of EU defense
    • 6. The political development of EU security
    • 7. The blurring of European security and defense.
      Author
    • Kaija Schilde , Boston University

      Kaija Schilde is an Assistant Professor of political science at the Boston University Pardee School of Global Studies.