Title: International Integration
1International Integration
CHAPTER TEN
Dr. Clayton Thyne PS 235-001 World
Politics Spring 2009 Goldstein Pevehouse,
International Relations, 8/e Student notes
version
2Supernationalism
- Purpose of the chapter
- Supranational
- United Nations
- European Union
3Integration Theory
- Definition Refers to the process by
- sovereignty
- Ultimate expression of integration
- In practice
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- Most successful example
4International Theory
- Integration challenges realism ?
- Answer to dilemma
- Functionalism
- Theory that discusses
- Supranational structures response
5International Theory
- Neofunctionalism
- Modification of functional theory by IR scholars
that argues that - Econ integration (functionalism) ?
- Sense of community
- Integration ?
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- Others trying to do the same
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6International Theory
- Costs of integration
- Harder to
- Degradation of
- Central theme of integration
7The European Union
- Created after WWII
- EU has gone through
- EU has nearly 500 million citizens.
- EU nearly equals the
8The Vision of a United Europe
- Europe in 1945
- Functionalism in Europe
- 1950 merger of
- European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)
- Six ECSC states signed treaty in 1952 to create a
European Defense Community -
-
9The Treaty of Rome
- Six states of the ECSC
- Extended coal and steel to
- Euratom
- European Economic Community (EEC)
10The Treaty of Rome
- 4 steps towards European integration
- Free-trade areas
- Customs Union
- Common market
- Economic monetary union (EMU)
- Future steps
11Structure of the European Union
- Roots in
- Eurocrats
- Leaders have qualms about
12Structure of the European Union
- European Commission
- Staff of 24,000
- HQ in Brussels, Belgium
- Commission has 27 individual members one from
each member state - Chosen for 4-year renewable terms
- Lacks formal autonomous power except for
day-to-day EU operations - Reports to, and implements policies of, the
Council of Ministers
13Structure of the European Union
- Council of Ministers
- Meeting of the relevant ministers of each member
state politicians who control the bureaucrats - Reflects states resistance to yielding
sovereignty - Voting system is based on each states
population, but in practice it operates by
consensus on major policy issues. - Has a rotating presidency (with limited power)
- European Council (1970s)
14Structure of the European Union
- European Parliament
- Falls somewhat short of a true legislature
passing laws for all of Europe - At present, it operates partly as a watchdog over
the Commission, but with some power to legislate. - Must approve the Commissions budget but no item
by item control. - Shares power with the Council under a
co-decision procedure. - Economic and Social Committee
- European Court of Justice (Luxembourg)
15(No Transcript)
16The Single European Act (1985)
- First major revision of the Treaty of Rome
- Began a new phase of accelerated integration
- Europe 1992 due to target date set
- Centered on 300 directives from the European
Commission - Push for European Central Bank
- Moved economic integration into more political
and controversial areas - Didnt deal w/ many issues of political or
military integration
17The Maastricht Treaty
- Renamed the EC as the EU and committed it to
further progress in three main areas - Monetary union
- Justice and home affairs
- Political and military integration
- Controversial
18The Maastricht Treaty
- Ratification -
- Has begun to reshape political economy at
- Political and military integration
- Struggle between
- Failure to deal w/
19Monetary Union
- A European currency, the euro, has replaced
national currencies in 13 EU members, as mandated
in the Maastricht process. - Came into full circulation in 2002
- Difficulties
- Main solution
20Monetary Union
- Breaking the rules
- Germany and Frances budget deficits over those
allowed by the rules - Greece falsified economic data needed to be
admitted - Difficult birth, given it was the largest
financial overhaul ever attempted in history, and
in its first five years was deemed very
successful.
21Expanding the European Union
- Success has attracted neighboring states who wish
to join. - EU has expanded from 15 members to 27 since 2004
- Spain and Portugal, 1986 (11th and 12th members)
- Austria, Sweden, and Finland (1995)
- Norway applied to join and was accepted, but its
citizens voted down the idea in 1994. - Switzerlands plans to join were halted by a
popular referendum in the early 1990s.
22Expanding the European Union
- Current expansion guided by the 2000 Treaty of
Nice - 10 new members joined in 2004
- Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary,
Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, and
Cyprus - Expanded to 25 members
- Without the five largest having two seats
- New voting rules that move away from a
requirement for consensus - 2007, Romania and Bulgaria entered the EU,
bringing the total to 27 - Turkey continues to seek membership
- Would be the only Muslim country in the EU
- Would bring workers, growth, bridge to the Middle
East - Some fear immigration
- Would be the poorest member
- Cyprus
- Inner and outer layers
23Figure 10.2
24Expanding the European Union
- EU Constitution (late 2004 signed by 24 leaders)
- To establish a stronger president of the EU, and
a foreign minister, to represent Europe as a
global superpower in world affairs - Rejected by France and the Netherlands, and the
process was halted - EU still functions under existing rules.
- Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE0) - Operates by consensus
25Figure 10.3
26The Power of Information
- Global telecommunications are
- Technological advances are
- Creation of new
27Connecting the World
- New international political possibilities arise
from technological developments in the area of
information dissemination. - The media with the strongest political impact
are -
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28TV and Radio
- Nearly 2 billion TV sets and 3 billion radio
receivers in the world - Radio, and increasingly TV, reach the poorest
rural areas of the global South. - Peasants who cannot read can understand radio.
- Voice of America
- British Broadcasting Corporation
- TV is especially powerful.
- Frequencies
- Regulated by states
- Satellite transmissions
- Bypass state control
- Al Jazeera
29Figure 10.4
30Telephone and Internet
- Unlike TV and radio,
- Telephones make individuals international actors.
- Explosive growth
- Digital divide
- Internet
31Figure 10.5
32Information as a Tool of Government
- Information has become
- Access to information
- Coordination of information
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- Use of information to influence
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- Ownership of media by
33Information as a Tool Against Government
- Information can be used against governments by
foreign governments, NGAs, or domestic political
opponents. - Domestic use
- Iran Internet uncensored
- China tremendous use, but censored
- Philippines text messages/cell phones used to
sweep a president from office - Ghana talk radio helped ordinary people throw
out the ruling party in 2000 - Global peace demonstrations preceding the 2003
Iraq War
34Information as a Tool Against Government
- Government attempts to
- Security implications of information technologies
- Smart weapons
- Empowerment of small fringe groups
- Hackers and viruses cyber attacks
35Telecommunications and Global Culture
- Info revolution ? 2 contradictory forces
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- Also
- Increase international interdependence
- Transparency in international relations
36Telecommunications and Global Culture
- Strengthening of the identity principle
- New sources and new avenues of
- Transnational communities
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- Cultural imperialism
- Half of worlds 7000
- US dominates
- News stories are integrated, showing a common
world theme - http//www.mcdonalds.com/
- http//www.princeton.edu/ina/infographics/starbuc
ks.html