The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?

In 2015, the intensification of the migration crisis has exposed the European Union to a highly politicized policy problem that was subject to radically different national approaches. In the past, the literature has tended to present the European Parliament as a highly supranational institution, wh...

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Main Author: Anna-Lena Högenauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2017-05-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/786
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spelling doaj-10873cbca3404952ae384f1973ae11062020-11-25T03:59:55ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2017-05-01132The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?Anna-Lena Högenauer0University of Luxembourg In 2015, the intensification of the migration crisis has exposed the European Union to a highly politicized policy problem that was subject to radically different national approaches. In the past, the literature has tended to present the European Parliament as a highly supranational institution, where formal procedures and informal practices have encouraged the emergence of transnational party groups over time. However, while these groups are now seen as enjoying a high level of cohesion, the literature also argues that national loyalties are likely to prevail in the case of conflict between the European party group and the national party. The migration crisis can be expected to create numerous conflicts that would undermine party cohesion. Yet, the analysis of plenary debates in 2015 shows that European party groups still benefit from a high level of cohesion and that most MEPs avoid couching their arguments in national terms. The European Parliament is thus still a fundamentally transnational actor. https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/786European Parliamentsupranationalismtransnationalismparty groupscohesionmigration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna-Lena Högenauer
spellingShingle Anna-Lena Högenauer
The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?
Journal of Contemporary European Research
European Parliament
supranationalism
transnationalism
party groups
cohesion
migration
author_facet Anna-Lena Högenauer
author_sort Anna-Lena Högenauer
title The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?
title_short The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?
title_full The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?
title_fullStr The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?
title_full_unstemmed The European Parliament in Times of Crisis: Transnationalism under Pressure?
title_sort european parliament in times of crisis: transnationalism under pressure?
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2017-05-01
description In 2015, the intensification of the migration crisis has exposed the European Union to a highly politicized policy problem that was subject to radically different national approaches. In the past, the literature has tended to present the European Parliament as a highly supranational institution, where formal procedures and informal practices have encouraged the emergence of transnational party groups over time. However, while these groups are now seen as enjoying a high level of cohesion, the literature also argues that national loyalties are likely to prevail in the case of conflict between the European party group and the national party. The migration crisis can be expected to create numerous conflicts that would undermine party cohesion. Yet, the analysis of plenary debates in 2015 shows that European party groups still benefit from a high level of cohesion and that most MEPs avoid couching their arguments in national terms. The European Parliament is thus still a fundamentally transnational actor.
topic European Parliament
supranationalism
transnationalism
party groups
cohesion
migration
url https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/786
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