Nationalism and Bounded Integration: What it Would Take to Construct a European Demos
European Journal of International Relations 7(2): 139–74.
This article uncovers some crucial key assumptions of polity‐formation underpinning the debate about the European Union’s democratic legitimacy. It uses theories of nationalism to understand why a demos is unlikely to develop easily at the European level. Based on a two‐by‐two categorization of the logic and scope of identity‐formation, I conclude that the most promising approach to European demos‐formation conceives of identities as both constructed and ‘sticky’. Labeling this theoretical position ‘bounded integration’, I suggest that it provides a more realistic foundation for developing democracy‐enhancing reform proposals than does post‐nationalist theorizing, especially due to the former’s explicit attention to identity‐conferring mechanisms such as education, language and media.
DOI:
10.1177/1354066101007002001
Cederman, Lars-Erik. 2001. “Nationalism and Bounded Integration: What It Would Take to Construct a European Demos.” European Journal of International Relations 7(2): 139–74.
@article{nationalism-and-bounded-integration,
title = {Nationalism and Bounded Integration: What it Would Take to Construct a European Demos},
author = {Cederman, Lars-Erik},
journal = {European Journal of International Relations},
volume = {7},
number = {2},
pages = {139--74},
year = {2001},
abstract = {This article uncovers some crucial key assumptions of polity-formation underpinning the debate about the European Union's democratic legitimacy. It uses theories of nationalism to understand why a demos is unlikely to develop easily at the European level. Based on a two-by-two categorization of the logic and scope of identity-formation, I conclude that the most promising approach to European demos-formation conceives of identities as both constructed and `sticky'. Labeling this theoretical position `bounded integration', I suggest that it provides a more realistic foundation for developing democracy-enhancing reform proposals than does post-nationalist theorizing, especially due to the former's explicit attention to identity-conferring mechanisms such as education, language and media.},
doi = {10.1177/1354066101007002001},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354066101007002001},
status = {personal}
}