Salvaging the European Union: The Inclusive Multi-Track Supranational Option

The EU has many supranational accomplishments to its credit. Frictions nonetheless exist within the EU because some members want to rollback parts of the consensus (“less Europe”) and others want to expand them (“more Europe”). The conflict cannot be amicably resolved as EU leaders are trying to do...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rosefielde Steven
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-12-01
Series:Holistica
Subjects:
eu
e02
e52
e61
f36
h63
h77
o52
p11
p17
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/hjbpa-2017-0019
Description
Summary:The EU has many supranational accomplishments to its credit. Frictions nonetheless exist within the EU because some members want to rollback parts of the consensus (“less Europe”) and others want to expand them (“more Europe”). The conflict cannot be amicably resolved as EU leaders are trying to do in a one-track supranational regime because both factions disagree about whether confederation or federation is best. A solution in a one-track system requires one side to capitulate to the other. This is why the EU is at an impasse. However, the conflict is easily resolved by switching from a one-track to a multi-track supranational system that allows advocates of “more Europe” and “less Europe” to do as they like in some areas, while acting collectively wherever consensus permits. The EU already accepts the multi-track principle with regard to the euro and non-euro zones, and could restore harmony to the European project by applying the principle more broadly.
ISSN:2067-9785