The paper sets out to explain why the European Central Bank and the European Commission relaxed their opposition to debt restructuring and fiscal accommodation for Greece in the shift from the first to second adjustment program. Using the findings of the empirical analysis, the paper shows that EU institutions\u2019 repositioning cannot easily be ascribed to the mechanisms that are typically at play in international negotiations, namely exogenous pressures and internalization of new beliefs through persuasion. Instead, the paper argues that a more nuanced and complete explanation of the relaxation of opposition to the change in the program strategy requires taking into account the institutional and temporal dimensions of the Troika negotiat...
A number of authors have argued that a ‘new intergovernmentalism’ has come to characterise EU decisi...
Levering domestic reform via external conditionality has become crucial to the rescues of European U...
This paper examines three questions regarding the controversial relationship between Greece and t...
The European Union is built on structures of economic co-operation, yet the sovereign debt crisis is...
In February, Greece agreed to a four month extension of its current bailout programme, subject to th...
On 20 February, Greece agreed to a four month extension of its current bailout programme, subject to...
Although debt restructuring and austerity have defined the debate on Greece and the Eurozone crisis,...
Greece and its creditors have been engaged in a two-month standoff over the release of further finan...
It appears to me that much of the ongoing discussion about the Greek debt talks misinterprets the pa...
While to date the Eurozone debt crisis is one of the most important and consequential events in worl...
Talks continued through the night in Brussels, with Eurozone leaders eventually reaching an agreemen...
Greece and its creditors concluded negotiations over a third bailout by signing a Memorandum of Unde...
This article argues that the integration of financial assistance capacity in the eurozone, which was...
The new Greek government, led by Alexis Tsipras’ Syriza, has announced its intention to renegotiate ...
Talks are continuing in an attempt to reach a deal between Greece and its creditors over the release...
A number of authors have argued that a ‘new intergovernmentalism’ has come to characterise EU decisi...
Levering domestic reform via external conditionality has become crucial to the rescues of European U...
This paper examines three questions regarding the controversial relationship between Greece and t...
The European Union is built on structures of economic co-operation, yet the sovereign debt crisis is...
In February, Greece agreed to a four month extension of its current bailout programme, subject to th...
On 20 February, Greece agreed to a four month extension of its current bailout programme, subject to...
Although debt restructuring and austerity have defined the debate on Greece and the Eurozone crisis,...
Greece and its creditors have been engaged in a two-month standoff over the release of further finan...
It appears to me that much of the ongoing discussion about the Greek debt talks misinterprets the pa...
While to date the Eurozone debt crisis is one of the most important and consequential events in worl...
Talks continued through the night in Brussels, with Eurozone leaders eventually reaching an agreemen...
Greece and its creditors concluded negotiations over a third bailout by signing a Memorandum of Unde...
This article argues that the integration of financial assistance capacity in the eurozone, which was...
The new Greek government, led by Alexis Tsipras’ Syriza, has announced its intention to renegotiate ...
Talks are continuing in an attempt to reach a deal between Greece and its creditors over the release...
A number of authors have argued that a ‘new intergovernmentalism’ has come to characterise EU decisi...
Levering domestic reform via external conditionality has become crucial to the rescues of European U...
This paper examines three questions regarding the controversial relationship between Greece and t...