Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EU

Since its beginnings in the 1950s, the policymaking scope and authority of the European Union have dramatically expanded across a wide range of issue areas. Yet much remains unknown about the interaction between public preferences for EU-level governance, changes in such governance and overall suppo...

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Main Author: Maurits van der Veen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2015-12-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/698
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spelling doaj-4bb876e7dea0471fa00575666ec0d0a82020-11-25T04:06:51ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2015-12-01121Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EUMaurits van der Veen0College of William & MarySince its beginnings in the 1950s, the policymaking scope and authority of the European Union have dramatically expanded across a wide range of issue areas. Yet much remains unknown about the interaction between public preferences for EU-level governance, changes in such governance and overall support for European integration. This article analyses surveys ranging from 1962 to 2010 to show that while support for integration in different policy areas has fluctuated over time, it has been surprisingly stable overall; moreover, the relative preference ordering across issue areas has been even more consistent. In addition, this consistency is not affected by changes in Europeanization, nor do such changes appear to be driven by the relative strength of preferences. Finally, issue-specific support for EU-level governance has an impact on overall EU support that becomes stronger as Europeanization in that issue area increases, an effect that increases further with greater political knowledge. These findings call into question understandings of rising Euroscepticism as a reaction to Europeanization taking place primarily in areas where publics oppose it. In addition, they indicate that public awareness of European integration is far greater than political knowledge tests appear to indicate.https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/698Public opinionGovernanceEuropeanizationEuroscepticismPolitical knowledge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maurits van der Veen
spellingShingle Maurits van der Veen
Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EU
Journal of Contemporary European Research
Public opinion
Governance
Europeanization
Euroscepticism
Political knowledge
author_facet Maurits van der Veen
author_sort Maurits van der Veen
title Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EU
title_short Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EU
title_full Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EU
title_fullStr Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EU
title_full_unstemmed Fifty Years of Public (Dis)Satisfaction with European Governance: Preferences, Europeanization and Support for the EU
title_sort fifty years of public (dis)satisfaction with european governance: preferences, europeanization and support for the eu
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Since its beginnings in the 1950s, the policymaking scope and authority of the European Union have dramatically expanded across a wide range of issue areas. Yet much remains unknown about the interaction between public preferences for EU-level governance, changes in such governance and overall support for European integration. This article analyses surveys ranging from 1962 to 2010 to show that while support for integration in different policy areas has fluctuated over time, it has been surprisingly stable overall; moreover, the relative preference ordering across issue areas has been even more consistent. In addition, this consistency is not affected by changes in Europeanization, nor do such changes appear to be driven by the relative strength of preferences. Finally, issue-specific support for EU-level governance has an impact on overall EU support that becomes stronger as Europeanization in that issue area increases, an effect that increases further with greater political knowledge. These findings call into question understandings of rising Euroscepticism as a reaction to Europeanization taking place primarily in areas where publics oppose it. In addition, they indicate that public awareness of European integration is far greater than political knowledge tests appear to indicate.
topic Public opinion
Governance
Europeanization
Euroscepticism
Political knowledge
url https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/698
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