Core Competence;
Territorial Unity;
Candidate Country;
National Minority;
Democratic Citizenship;
D O I:
10.1023/B:DIAL.0000006103.01911.81
中图分类号:
学科分类号:
摘要:
Since the collapse of the Soviet bloc, the term “Europe” has reached a new dimension. The fall of the Berlin Wall opened the East to the West and, in 1989, the European space moved up from two entities symbolically separated by a wall to one territorial unity. But we cannot say that this unity is a political one. This dichotomy is not based on two different political orientations, but on the adhesion or the non-adhesion to economic, political and especially moral principles. Thus two conceptions of the European space are competing. The term “Europe” has two major significations: firstly it refers to the European Union, and secondly to a Great Europe, including the states which have belonged to the former Soviet bloc. How can we define how this Great Europe perceived itself and what are its limits? The objective of this paper is to demonstrate that the two visions of the European space are under competition through two institutions. They convey two representations of this
European space and imagine it in two perspectives. Therefore, the collapse of the Soviet bloc has altered in depth the perception of the European space and created a new dichotomy.
机构:
Univ Oxford St Antonys Coll, European Studies, Oxford, England
Univ Oxford St Antonys Coll, Oxford, England
Hoover Inst War Revolut & Peace, Stanford, CA 94305 USAUniv Oxford St Antonys Coll, European Studies, Oxford, England