Search results for "Neofunctionalism"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

From Neo-Functional Peace to a Logic of Spillover in EU External Policy: A Response to Visoka and Doyle

2017

In their recently published JCMS article, Gezim Visoka and John Doyle have proposed the concept of ‘neofunctional peace’ as a means to conceptualize the EU's peacemaking practices in the case of the EU-facilitated Belgrade-Pristina dialogue. This article challenges the ‘neo-functional peace’ on conceptual and empirical grounds. We critically discuss Visoka and Doyle's (2016) reading of neofunctionalism and question parts of their empirical evidence given for the existence of a ‘neo-functional peace’. Going beyond a mere critique of the article by Visoka and Doyle and arguing that the authors may not have fully exploited neofunctionalism's potential for theorizing EU external policy, we stip…

021110 strategic defence & security studiesEconomics and EconometricsEntrepreneurshipbusiness.industry05 social sciences0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyInternational tradeGeneral Business Management and Accounting0506 political scienceNeofunctionalismSpillover effectAction (philosophy)Political Science and International RelationsMediationRealm050602 political science & public administrationPeacemakingSociologyBusiness and International ManagementPositive economicsEmpirical evidencebusinessJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies
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A Neofunctionalist Perspective on the ‘European Refugee Crisis’: The Case of the European Border and Coast Guard

2017

Initial literature on the ‘European refugee crisis’ discerned intergovernmental tendencies in its management. This paper examines whether neofunctionalism may be able to explain a major case of ‘European refugee crisis’ policy-making, the negotiations on the European Border and Coast Guard regulation. We argue, somewhat counterintuitively, that the theory considerably furthers our respective understanding. The crisis acted as a catalyst exposing the weaknesses of a system that pitted a supranational Schengen against a largely intergovernmental external border regime, notwithstanding a developing Frontex. These dysfunctionalities have been widely fostered by both national and supranational d…

Economics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesGeneral Business Management and Accounting0506 political scienceNeofunctionalismPoliticsNegotiationSpillover effectPolitical sciencePolitical economy0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International RelationsAgency (sociology)050602 political science & public administrationmedia_common.cataloged_instanceResizing050207 economicsBusiness and International ManagementEuropean unionSunk costsmedia_commonJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies
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Theoretical Approaches to Crisis: An Introduction

2020

This chapter sums up the key arguments made in this section of the Handbook. The nine chapters discuss essential EU integration and International Relations approaches and how they study, understand, and explain crisis’ putative impact on the EU: Liberal Intergovernmentalism, Classical Realism, Neo-realism, Neofunctionalism, Institutionalism, Organizational Theory, Cleavage Theory, Social constructivism, and Deliberative Theory. For this purpose, each chapter sets out the theory’s basic assumptions before addressing the following questions: (1) How does each theoretical perspective expect crisis to influence EU institutions and policies? What are the causal mechanisms to account for continui…

International relationsClassical RealismPolitical scienceInstitutionalismPublic policyOrganizational theoryLiberal intergovernmentalismPositive economicsSocial constructivismNeofunctionalism
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