The EU has frequently been caricatured as a ‘faceless bureaucracy’, where rules and procedures take precedence over powerful personalities. Yet this depersonalisation of power has recently been challenged by the emergence of some visible, decisive figures. Jonathan White argues that while this may be seen as a welcome improvement by some observers, when power is located in a small, rotating cast of individuals acting at their own discretion, it rests on a precarious foundation
The EU’s Early Warning System, best known for the ‘yellow cards’ that can be issued by national parl...
The EU’s enlargement process has stalled over the last decade and there appears little prospect of a...
Eunice Goes offers an overview of Keir Starmer’s first three months in office. She concludes that th...
Public support for the EU rose after the referendum, while Jean-Claude Juncker has painted a starry ...
Several leading European politicians, including French President Emmanuel Macron, have recently spok...
European integration was once thought of as a largely technocratic process built around consensus, b...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
Numerous authors and political figures have identified the rise of populism as a potential threat to...
The EU’s fiscal rules, which state that governments should run budget deficits no higher than 3% of ...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
What is the biggest concern facing South Asia over the next decade? Ritika Arora-Kukreja — winner of...
Disputes over how to regulate artificial intelligence have rapidly risen up the global agenda in the...
What is the causal relationship between crisis, learning and change? How did causality unfold in the...
What kind of thing, as it were, is power and how does it fit into our understanding of the social wo...
Tim Oliver (LSE Ideas) reviews The European Union in Crisis. He writes that this latest contribution...
The EU’s Early Warning System, best known for the ‘yellow cards’ that can be issued by national parl...
The EU’s enlargement process has stalled over the last decade and there appears little prospect of a...
Eunice Goes offers an overview of Keir Starmer’s first three months in office. She concludes that th...
Public support for the EU rose after the referendum, while Jean-Claude Juncker has painted a starry ...
Several leading European politicians, including French President Emmanuel Macron, have recently spok...
European integration was once thought of as a largely technocratic process built around consensus, b...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
Numerous authors and political figures have identified the rise of populism as a potential threat to...
The EU’s fiscal rules, which state that governments should run budget deficits no higher than 3% of ...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
What is the biggest concern facing South Asia over the next decade? Ritika Arora-Kukreja — winner of...
Disputes over how to regulate artificial intelligence have rapidly risen up the global agenda in the...
What is the causal relationship between crisis, learning and change? How did causality unfold in the...
What kind of thing, as it were, is power and how does it fit into our understanding of the social wo...
Tim Oliver (LSE Ideas) reviews The European Union in Crisis. He writes that this latest contribution...
The EU’s Early Warning System, best known for the ‘yellow cards’ that can be issued by national parl...
The EU’s enlargement process has stalled over the last decade and there appears little prospect of a...
Eunice Goes offers an overview of Keir Starmer’s first three months in office. She concludes that th...