"This book has been brought to life in a period where transnational solidarity and cooperation seemed to be moving backwards rather than forwards. This was among others reflected in the so called refugee crisis in Europe in 2015. After the Brexit referendum in the United Kingdom in June 2016, and presidential elections in the US later the same year, the political agenda took a turn towards focusing primarily on the internal national perspective in relation to areas such as environmental protection, aid to countries in the Third World and trade with the outside world. It still remains to be seen when and how the United Kingdom will be leaving the European Union. In general, the EU has experienced a number of crises, among others an economic and financial crisis and later the refugee crisis, during the past years. These crises have challenged transnational solidarity in Europe. This development in Europe and the World stresses the question, whether and how transnational solidarity is possible. This book ismotivated by these developments and discusses and attempts to answer this question. Our main presumption is that solidarity can create stability and sustainability (social, economic, environmental, peace etc.), within states, regions and globally, why itis crucial to gain more knowledge about it. Realization of the UN Sustainability Goals 2017 and 2030 go hand in hand with solidarity at both local, regional and global levels. In this work, we do of course build on earlier discussions and investigations of solidarity"--
Muu info
This book analyses the concept and conditions of transnational solidarity, the challenges and the opportunities, from an interdisciplinary global perspective.
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viii | |
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ix | |
| Preface |
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xi | |
| Introduction |
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1 | (8) |
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PART I Transnational Solidarity: Concept and Conditions |
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9 | (92) |
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1 Solidarity: A Short History from the Concept's Beginnings to the Present Situation |
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11 | (11) |
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2 Solidarity Between the National and the Transnational: What Do We Owe to `Outsiders'? |
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22 | (20) |
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3 Democratic Solidarity Between Global Crisis and Cosmopolitan Hope |
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42 | (19) |
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4 Chains of Solidarity: Violence and Debt |
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61 | (15) |
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5 Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity |
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76 | (25) |
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PART II Transnational Solidarity in Europe: Under Pressure and Change |
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101 | (126) |
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6 Solidarity and the Economic and Monetary Union in Times of Economic Crisis |
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103 | (25) |
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7 Negative Solidarity: The European Union and the Financial Crisis |
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128 | (37) |
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8 Refugee Protection as a Public Good: How to Make Responsibility-Sharing Initiatives More Effective |
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165 | (22) |
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9 The Brexit Crisis: Challenges for Cross-Border Solidarity |
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187 | (21) |
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10 Transnational Claims in the European Union and the Founding Principle of Solidarity |
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208 | (19) |
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PART III (Re)Establishing Transnational Solidarity Within Existing European Institutions and Political Settings |
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227 | (98) |
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11 Postnational European Democracy: Aristotelian Caveats |
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229 | (23) |
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12 Solidarity in the Case Law of the European Court of Justice: Opportunities Missed? |
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252 | (49) |
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13 Civic Solidarity in Transnational Spaces: Organization and Institutionalization of Solidarity Within the European Union |
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301 | (24) |
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PART IV Creating New Forms of Transnational Solidarity in Europe |
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325 | (93) |
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14 Free Movement and Social Citizenship: Towards a Politically Constructed Understanding of Solidarity Across Borders |
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327 | (23) |
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15 New Opportunities for Transnational Solidarity Mobilisation: The Role of the Media |
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350 | (24) |
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16 Changing Normativity and Solidarity: European Legal and Trans-Religious Perspectives |
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374 | (19) |
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17 Transnational Solidarity Among European Cities |
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393 | (25) |
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| Concluding Thoughts: Concept, Challenges and Opportunities |
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418 | (19) |
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| Index |
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437 | |
Helle Krunke is Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Copenhagen. She is First Vice President of the International Association of Constitutional Law. She has published extensively on Constitutional Law and EU Law and was invited to present papers at the University of Oxford, University of Sorbonne and European University Institute. Hanne Petersen is Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen. She is the first Nordic Professor of Legal Cultures and has previously held positions as Jean Monnet Scholar at the European University Institute, Florence, Professor at University of Greenland, and Professor of Greenlandic Sociology of Law at the University of Copenhagen. Her publications relate, amongst others, to labour law, gender, religion, the Arctic and China. Ian Manners is Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Copenhagen. He has previously been Professor at Roskilde University, Head of the unit at DIIS, Associate Professor at Malmö University and at the University of Kent at Canterbury. Professor Manners' research interests lie at the intersection of critical social theory, the European Union and planetary politics.