This article examines the Europeanisation of Greek foreign policy during the Eurozone crisis. It proposes a conceptualisation of Europeanisation as de-politicisation and argues that national foreign policy in the EU under crisis has been re-politicised, i.e. it is increasingly contested among electorates while elites are becoming more conscious of the legitimacy deficits created when national policymaking is exercised primarily via EU institutions. In this context, Europeanisation of foreign policy becomes reflexive, i.e. it is subject to more active scrutiny by public opinion while foreign policy making reflects elites' effort to manage increasingly fractious state-society relations. The article also differentiates between two types of re-...
This article presents a critique of the existing consensus in the academic literature of a successfu...
Where some authors saw a limited impact of Europeanisation on national party politics, others propos...
This article argues that the origins of the Greek malaise are primarily political rather than econom...
This working paper examines tendencies in Greek foreign policy during the Eurozone crisis. Existing ...
The Eurozone crisis is now widely seen as a threshold for Greek politics, society and state structur...
This article seeks to investigate the impact of the Eurozone crisis on the foreign policy of member ...
This article traces the trajectory of party Euroscepticism in Greece drawing upon theories of issue ...
Where some authors saw a limited impact of Europeanisation on national party politics, others propos...
This article investigates the impact of the eurozone crisis on the foreign policy of an EU Member St...
This article investigates the impact of the eurozone crisis on the foreign policy of an EU Member St...
This article aims to theorise about how dynamics of party competition influence government decisions...
This article presents new research on the Europeanness of Greek political elites under the economic ...
This article analyses whether and how public opinion towards the European Union (EU) in Greece has c...
The Europeanisation of Greek foreign policy was announced in the 1990s as a ‘success story’. However...
The concept of Europeanization has developed considerably since its initial phase in the early 1990s...
This article presents a critique of the existing consensus in the academic literature of a successfu...
Where some authors saw a limited impact of Europeanisation on national party politics, others propos...
This article argues that the origins of the Greek malaise are primarily political rather than econom...
This working paper examines tendencies in Greek foreign policy during the Eurozone crisis. Existing ...
The Eurozone crisis is now widely seen as a threshold for Greek politics, society and state structur...
This article seeks to investigate the impact of the Eurozone crisis on the foreign policy of member ...
This article traces the trajectory of party Euroscepticism in Greece drawing upon theories of issue ...
Where some authors saw a limited impact of Europeanisation on national party politics, others propos...
This article investigates the impact of the eurozone crisis on the foreign policy of an EU Member St...
This article investigates the impact of the eurozone crisis on the foreign policy of an EU Member St...
This article aims to theorise about how dynamics of party competition influence government decisions...
This article presents new research on the Europeanness of Greek political elites under the economic ...
This article analyses whether and how public opinion towards the European Union (EU) in Greece has c...
The Europeanisation of Greek foreign policy was announced in the 1990s as a ‘success story’. However...
The concept of Europeanization has developed considerably since its initial phase in the early 1990s...
This article presents a critique of the existing consensus in the academic literature of a successfu...
Where some authors saw a limited impact of Europeanisation on national party politics, others propos...
This article argues that the origins of the Greek malaise are primarily political rather than econom...