Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green Deal

In the European Union, the concern for sustainability has been legitimized by its politically and ecologically motivated discourse disseminated through recent policies of the European Commission and the local as well as international media. In the article, we question the very meaning of sustainabil...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eva Eckert, Oleksandra Kovalevska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Journal of Risk and Financial Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/14/2/80
id doaj-d5564c65e54e4e0ca61aa21e7389796f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d5564c65e54e4e0ca61aa21e7389796f2021-02-18T00:03:10ZengMDPI AGJournal of Risk and Financial Management1911-80661911-80742021-02-0114808010.3390/jrfm14020080Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green DealEva Eckert0Oleksandra Kovalevska1School of Humanities & Social Sciences, Anglo-American University, Letenská 120/5, 118 00 Malá Strana, Czech RepublicDepartment of International Relations and European Studies, Metropolitan University Prague, Dubečská 900/10, 100 31 Strašnice, Czech RepublicIn the European Union, the concern for sustainability has been legitimized by its politically and ecologically motivated discourse disseminated through recent policies of the European Commission and the local as well as international media. In the article, we question the very meaning of sustainability and examine the <i>European Green Deal</i>, the major political document issued by the EC in 2019. The main question pursued in the study is whether expectations verbalized in the <i>Green Deal</i>’s plans, programs, strategies, and developments hold up to the scrutiny of critical discourse analysis. We compare the <i>Green Deal</i>’s treatment of sustainability to how sustainability is presented in environmental and social science scholarship and point out that research, on the one hand, and the politically motivated discourse, on the other, do not correlate and often actually contradict each other. We conclude that sustainability discourse and its keywords, lexicon, and phraseology have become a channel through which political institutions in the EU such as the European Commission sideline crucial environmental issues and endorse their own presence. The <i>Green Deal</i> discourse shapes political and institutional power of the Commission and the EU.https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/14/2/80sustainabilitycritical discourse analysisthe <i>European Green Deal</i>plastic wasteeconomic growth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva Eckert
Oleksandra Kovalevska
spellingShingle Eva Eckert
Oleksandra Kovalevska
Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green Deal
Journal of Risk and Financial Management
sustainability
critical discourse analysis
the <i>European Green Deal</i>
plastic waste
economic growth
author_facet Eva Eckert
Oleksandra Kovalevska
author_sort Eva Eckert
title Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green Deal
title_short Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green Deal
title_full Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green Deal
title_fullStr Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green Deal
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability in the European Union: Analyzing the Discourse of the European Green Deal
title_sort sustainability in the european union: analyzing the discourse of the european green deal
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Risk and Financial Management
issn 1911-8066
1911-8074
publishDate 2021-02-01
description In the European Union, the concern for sustainability has been legitimized by its politically and ecologically motivated discourse disseminated through recent policies of the European Commission and the local as well as international media. In the article, we question the very meaning of sustainability and examine the <i>European Green Deal</i>, the major political document issued by the EC in 2019. The main question pursued in the study is whether expectations verbalized in the <i>Green Deal</i>’s plans, programs, strategies, and developments hold up to the scrutiny of critical discourse analysis. We compare the <i>Green Deal</i>’s treatment of sustainability to how sustainability is presented in environmental and social science scholarship and point out that research, on the one hand, and the politically motivated discourse, on the other, do not correlate and often actually contradict each other. We conclude that sustainability discourse and its keywords, lexicon, and phraseology have become a channel through which political institutions in the EU such as the European Commission sideline crucial environmental issues and endorse their own presence. The <i>Green Deal</i> discourse shapes political and institutional power of the Commission and the EU.
topic sustainability
critical discourse analysis
the <i>European Green Deal</i>
plastic waste
economic growth
url https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/14/2/80
work_keys_str_mv AT evaeckert sustainabilityintheeuropeanunionanalyzingthediscourseoftheeuropeangreendeal
AT oleksandrakovalevska sustainabilityintheeuropeanunionanalyzingthediscourseoftheeuropeangreendeal
_version_ 1724264076572360704