Are European citizens now living, as the German sociologist Ulrich Beck once described, in a German Europe? Peter Becker writes that while the actions of Germany throughout the Greek debt and migration crises have provoked diverse responses from commentators outside of the country, Germany’s European policy has consistently been in line with its role as the dominant ‘status quo power’ in the European Union. He argues that Germany’s decision to open its borders to refugees was neither the act of a benevolent hegemon, nor an example of German unilateralism, but rather an attempt to preserve the existing order in Europe
The end of the Second World War brought a new kind of system and of stability in Europe that they ne...
One of the key geopolitical issues in Europe prior to the Second World War was how the power of Germ...
Are we now living in a German Europe? In an interview with EUROPP editors Stuart A Brown and Chris G...
Throughout the Greek debt crisis, the majority of criticism from those who support a more lenient de...
This paper presents a set of theses to argue that, two decades after German re-unification and the e...
Germany is often described as a ‘reluctant hegemon’ in the sense that it has found itself pushed to ...
Is Germany’s new position on Schengen a sign of the ‘normalisation’ of its European policy? Germa...
This paper presents a set of theses to argue that, two decades after German re-unification and the e...
Never as in this moment has reflecting on Germany also meant reflecting on Europe. There is not one ...
Germany is still in many ways a reluctant leader, even if its economic strength and its increasingly...
Robert Grimm and Marius Guderjan argue that Germany’s relative economic well-being and prosperity pa...
The main proposition of the author of the paper is that the role and importance of Germany in Europe...
A crisis can bring out the best in Germany's European policy, resulting in its selfless embrace of d...
The German government has been at the heart of the EU’s response to the Eurozone crisis, but key dec...
The end of the Second World War brought a new kind of system and of stability in Europe that they ne...
The end of the Second World War brought a new kind of system and of stability in Europe that they ne...
One of the key geopolitical issues in Europe prior to the Second World War was how the power of Germ...
Are we now living in a German Europe? In an interview with EUROPP editors Stuart A Brown and Chris G...
Throughout the Greek debt crisis, the majority of criticism from those who support a more lenient de...
This paper presents a set of theses to argue that, two decades after German re-unification and the e...
Germany is often described as a ‘reluctant hegemon’ in the sense that it has found itself pushed to ...
Is Germany’s new position on Schengen a sign of the ‘normalisation’ of its European policy? Germa...
This paper presents a set of theses to argue that, two decades after German re-unification and the e...
Never as in this moment has reflecting on Germany also meant reflecting on Europe. There is not one ...
Germany is still in many ways a reluctant leader, even if its economic strength and its increasingly...
Robert Grimm and Marius Guderjan argue that Germany’s relative economic well-being and prosperity pa...
The main proposition of the author of the paper is that the role and importance of Germany in Europe...
A crisis can bring out the best in Germany's European policy, resulting in its selfless embrace of d...
The German government has been at the heart of the EU’s response to the Eurozone crisis, but key dec...
The end of the Second World War brought a new kind of system and of stability in Europe that they ne...
The end of the Second World War brought a new kind of system and of stability in Europe that they ne...
One of the key geopolitical issues in Europe prior to the Second World War was how the power of Germ...
Are we now living in a German Europe? In an interview with EUROPP editors Stuart A Brown and Chris G...