Loading...

The European Union: A Political Sociology

ISBN: 978-0-631-22618-5

November 2002

Wiley-Blackwell

320 pages

Description
The European Union is the first full-length treatment of European integration from a sociological perspective. It redirects the core concerns of political sociology away from nationally bounded societies towards a "sociology beyond societies," capable of making a valuable contribution to thinking about the nature and problems of the European Union. Within this broad objective the book concerns itself with such key issues as the relation between the EU and globalization, the nature of the EU state, and the question of whether a European society can be said to exist. Students, scholars, and sociologists interested in the history, development, and legacies of the European Union will find this to be a unique and informative text.
About the Author
Chris Rumford teaches in the Department of International Relations at Istanbul Kultur University, and is a Visiting Fellow at City University, London. He has written a number of articles on the dynamics of European integration and the sociology of European issues, and is the author of European Cohesion? Contradictions in EU Integration (2000).
Features

  • Analyzes European integration from a political sociological perspective.

  • Discusses the history, development, and legacies of the European Union.

  • Covers key issues such as globalization, the EU state, and the question of EU society.

  • Addresses crucial policy areas including unemployment, citizenship, social exclusion, cohesion, core-periphery relations, the "democratic deficit", and enlargement.

  • Includes both theoretical and empirical approaches.