Title: Methodologies and Research Design in the Social Sciences
1A Political Sociology of European Democracy
2A Political Sociology of European Democracy
Week 7 Lecture 1 Lecturer Paul Blokker
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Introduction
- Part III
- The Political Sociological Study of European
Democracy - Specific case-studies
- Political sociology of elites
- Political sociology of social movements
- Sociology of migration
- Forms of critique on EU democracy
- Methodologies
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Introduction
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Political Sociology
- Part III
- The Political Sociological Study of European
Democracy
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Political Sociology
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Post-national democracy
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Post-national democracy
- The new era of rights
- Stefano Rodotà
- - There is a recent renewal in attachments to
rights both Obama and Hollande refer to gay
rights and same sex marriages in public debate - - Also in Italy, rights have new coinage the
Corte di Cassazione recently ruled in favour of
gay marriages
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Post-national democracy
- The new era of rights
- Stefano Rodotà
- - Such renewed relevance of rights has a lot to
do with a European dimension - - The European Court of Human Rights and the EU
Charter of Fundamental Rights provide the basis
for the protection and extension of rights - - Also the Lisbon Treaty contributes to a rights
extension for instance, the right to a Citizens
Initiative.
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Post-national democracy
- The new era of rights
- Stefano Rodotà
- - Europe is thus not merely about economic
predominance and narrow-minded politics - - Europe is also about rights, and offers an
additional level of protection and enablement to
citizens - - Economic and monetary integration is
paralleled by an integration by means of rights
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Post-national democracy
- The new era of rights
- Stefano Rodotà
- - Europe is thus not merely about economic
predominance and narrow-minded politics - - Europe is also about rights, and offers an
additional level of protection and enablement to
citizens - - Economic and monetary integration is
paralleled by an integration by means of rights
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Post-national democracy
- The new era of rights
- Stefano Rodotà
- - Europe is thus not merely about economic
predominance and narrow-minded politics - - Europe is also about rights, and offers an
additional level of protection and enablement to
citizens - - Economic and monetary integration is
paralleled by an integration by means of rights
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Post-national democracy
- The new era of rights
- Stefano Rodotà
- - Europe suffers from a double deficit
- 1. democratic (input, participation)
- 2. legitimacy (output, for whom? solidarity)
- - These deficits have become more evident in the
current crisis - - Many now argue for a new constitutional
project, including a reinforcement of the EP
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Post-national democracy
- The new era of rights
- Stefano Rodotà
- - If Europe needs redemocratization the
development of a common economic policy is not
enough, it would merely create a European
democracy without a people - - Current elections result point to times that
are changing citizens actions work through
rights, and citizens are the indispensable
protagonists of a possible new era.
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Post-national democracy
- A Porous Democracy Will Save Europe
- Andrea Manzella La Repubblica
- - The real democratic question of our times is
the relationship between the democratic state and
the financial economy - - The problems of the Euro and of the crisis in
general have turned into a kind of subterranean
referendum on being pro or contra the EU
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Post-national democracy
- A Porous Democracy Will Save Europe
- Andrea Manzella La Repubblica
- - Three radical changes
- 1. States as Masters of the Treaties ?
Treaties as Masters of States - 2. The democratic deficit has descended to the
state level an induced democratic deficit - 3. A rapidly increased visibility of the EU in
national public debates.
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Post-national democracy
- A Porous Democracy Will Save Europe
- Andrea Manzella La Repubblica
- - A new political energy is visible
- - It is not true that this energy is necessarily
populist - - This energy could also be pushing towards a
porous democracy which is able to connect
national democracies and a EU democracy.
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Political Sociology
- Part III
- The Political Sociological Study of European
Democracy
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EU democracy analysed
- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- (Georgakakis Weisbein 2010)
- - In political scientific and other approaches
to European integration, actors have not figured
prominently, at least not in individualistic or
group terms (exception history of EU
integration) - - A prominent emphasis is on states
(intergovernmentalism) and institutions (the
Council, the Commission)
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EU democracy analysed
- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- (Georgakakis Weisbein 2010)
- - An important sociological thread in European
research is endorsing an approach that focuses on
actors in their own right - - A political sociology (i.e. focussing on
actors that are important for European politics)
might engage with both elite actors on the EU
level as well as social actors, on the level of
society
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A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - The EU can be understood
as consisting of an institutional field (or
several), with its own rules, norms, rites and
rituals, forms of interaction, distinct types of
capital, distinct discourses (cf. Bourdieu for
the idea of field) - The political field
encompasses a sphere that is about representation
and protest, a universalistic, public/civic
language, distinct rituals (European summits,
conventions, presidencies), social and cultural
capital.
EU democracy analysed
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A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - A focus on the EU as a
multi-level political field emphasizes 1. the
political struggle between groups and
individuals over the object of Europe/the
EU 2. a focus on the political agents
(political elites, civil activists,
intellectuals, bureaucrats) involved in the
construction of the EU/European integration
(cf. Kauppi 2005)
EU democracy analysed
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A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - Two types of factors
hamper the democratic quality of the EU 1.
the executive-domination of the political
field 2. the European political field is
dominated by national politics and political
cultures (Kauppi 2005)
EU democracy analysed
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A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field 1. The concept of field
calls for a different approach to EU
institutions, that is, historically tracing
internal cleavages and analysing the positions of
different types of actors (full time Europeans
vs. part-time) 2. An emphasis on elite
configurations as present in the social field of
the EU (shifting importance as, for instance, in
the recent rise of experts) 3. The effect of
the structure of positions on how agents think
about Europe.
EU democracy analysed
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EU democracy analysed
A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - A political sociology of
elites might reveal important insights in the
social, academic, and professional backgrounds of
those in charge - A political sociology of EU
also contributes to a more intricate
understanding of relations and conflict between
relevant political actors (for instance, between
political and bureaucratic actors, e.g., the EC
and the DGs)
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EU democracy analysed
A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - Focussing on elites and
their specific backgrounds as well as communities
has important advantages 1. Enriching and
historicising existing studies in EU
institutions 2. Reconceptualizing the
institutionalization of the EU (using, e.g.,
different fields)
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EU democracy analysed
A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - A sociology focussed on
social agents and groups might start from the
ideas of - interaction - conflicts and
tensions - the notion of habitus (dispositions
to act) - ideas and discourses - relational
contexts (fields, institutions, organizations)
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EU democracy analysed
A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - Mapping out the persons
that populate the EU institutions should start
from their biographies and prosopographies - In
this way, actors positions can be mapped out
(origin, institutions) as well as the structure
of resources and experiences (incl. social
capital)
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EU democracy analysed
A Political Sociology of European Actors The EU
institutional field - An example is DG Regio
is populated by geographers and urban
sociologists whereas DG Comp is populated by
economic jurists habitus/epistemic
communities networks power resources
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- The EU institutional field
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- - By sociologically researching actors one
contributes to a more complex picture of European
politics - - duality national-supranational (?)
- - official role of EU institutions (e.g.
Commissionsupranational) - - organizational cultures
- - importance of specific skills (e.g.
technocratic in 1990s, management and financial
in 2000s) - - importance of ideas/dispositions.
EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- The EU institutional field
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- - A political sociology can also fruitfully turn
to the study of European society - - Such a study can include the attention for the
social foundations of European integration,
including in the form of matrimonial choices,
sports (football as European integration),
intra-EU mobility, towns twinning, Capitals of
Culture, consumption patterns, professional
identities, etc.
EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- The EU institutional field
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- - Actors of European society include
individuals, professional communities, students,
voluntary associations, social classes) - - A focus on social actors helps us to
understand how non-political issues may produce a
relatively integrated community (Georgakakis
Weisbein 2010)
EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- The EU institutional field
- Benefits of a focus on European society
-
- 1. An understanding of the diversity of groups
and actors engaged in European integration/routine
interaction on European level leads to a
re-evaluation of what European integration is
about - 2. A shift in focus on actors until recently
seen as less relevant (regional/local
governments, national political ministries,
experts, local interest groups)
EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- The EU institutional field
- Benefits of a focus on European society
- 1. An understanding of the diversity of groups
and actors engaged in European integration/routine
interaction on European level leads to a
re-evaluation of what European integration is
about - 2. A shift in focus on actors until recently
seen as less relevant (regional/local
governments, national political ministries,
experts, local interest groups)
EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- The EU institutional field
- Benefits of a focus on European society
- 1. An understanding of the diversity of groups
and actors engaged in European integration/routine
interaction on European level leads to a
re-evaluation of what European integration is
about - 2. A shift in focus on actors until recently
seen as less relevant (regional/local
governments, national political ministries,
experts, local interest groups)
EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- Eurostars and Eurocities (Adrian Favell)
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- - A sociology of free moving professionals in
the EU - - Contribution to understanding the slowness
with which a European society in terms of
cross-border settlement emerges in the EU - - A sociological study of how European society
is - or is - not created through individual life
choices and career trajectories
EU democracy analysed
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EU democracy analysed
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EU democracy analysed
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EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- Eurostars and Eurocities (Adrian Favell)
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- - Even if one of the core missions of the EU is
to break down barriers to free movement,
surprisingly few people move and settle
permanently outside of their own country of
origin - - The percentage of the EU population is well
under 5 and much behind migration of non-EU
people - - In highly global countries such as Britain or
the Netherlands the figure is under 1,5
EU democracy analysed
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- A Political Sociology of European Actors
- Eurostars and Eurocities (Adrian Favell)
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- - Favell attempts a novel approach to the study
of globalization and Europeanization,
individual-focussed and using qualitative methods
(participant observation, oral history) - - He focusses on distinct Eurocities (Brussels,
Amsterdam) and Eurostars (young professionals) - - Among other things, he tries to understand the
level of Europeanization in terms of intra-EU
mobility and the importance of EU citizenship
EU democracy analysed
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