Cosmopolitan Europe

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Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2007-11-12
Publisher(s): Polity
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Summary

Europe is Europe's last remaining realistic political utopia. But Europe remains to be understood and conceptualized. This historically unique form of international community cannot be explained in terms of the traditional concepts of politics and the state, which remain trapped in the straightjacket of methodological nationalism. Thus, if we are to understand cosmopolitan Europe, we must radically rethink the conventional categories of social and political analysis. Just as the Peace of Westphalia brought the religious civil wars of the seventeenth century to an end through the separation of church and state, so too the separation of state and nation represents the appropriate response to the horrors of the twentieth century. And just as the secular state makes the exercise of different religions possible, so too cosmopolitan Europe must guarantee the coexistence of different ethnic, religious and political forms of life across national borders based on the principle of cosmopolitan tolerance. The task the authors have set themselves in this book is nothing less than to rethink Europe as an idea and a reality. It represents an attempt to understand the process of Europeanization in light of the theory of reflexive modernization and thereby to redefine it at both the theoretical and the political level. This book completes Ulrich Beck's trilogy on 'cosmopolitan realism', the volumes of which complement each other and can be read independently. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the key social and political developments of our time.

Author Biography

U. Beck, Professor of Sociology, Ludwig-Maximillian University of Munich

Table of Contents

Prefacep. xii
Introduction: The European Malaise and Why the Idea of Cosmopolitan Europe Could Overcome Itp. 1
Rethinking Europep. 1
What is meant by cosmopolitan Europe?p. 5
What is Europe?p. 6
What is cosmopolitanism?p. 11
Sociological and political cosmopolitanism: from the national to the cosmopolitan outlook in research on Europep. 17
Institutionalized cosmopolitanismp. 19
Deformed cosmopolitanismp. 20
Cosmopolitan realismp. 20
European self-delusionsp. 21
The national self-delusionp. 21
The neoliberal self-delusionp. 23
The technocratic self-delusionp. 24
The Eurocentric self-delusionp. 25
The Reflexive Modernization of Europep. 28
From the first to the second modernity: Europeanization revisited - from the perspective of the theory of reflexive modernizationp. 28
Europe and the reflexive modernization of state and societyp. 31
The inclusive Europep. 33
Europeanization as regime of side effectsp. 35
Europeanization as transformative regimep. 40
Europeanization as self-propelling regimep. 46
Cosmopolitan Empire: Statehood and Political Authority in the Process of Europeanizationp. 50
The national either/or Europe and its predicamentsp. 50
State and empirep. 54
What is meant by empire?p. 54
State and empire in comparisonp. 56
Empire and models of international order in comparisonp. 58
Imperium and empire: historical variants of imperial constitution of orderp. 60
Features of the European Empirep. 62
Asymmetrical political orderp. 63
Open, variable spatial structurep. 64
Multinational societal structurep. 65
Integration through law, consensus and cooperationp. 66
Welfare vs. securityp. 67
Horizontal and vertical institutional integrationp. 68
Network powerp. 69
Cosmopolitan sovereigntyp. 70
Ambivalence of delimitation and limitationp. 71
Emancipatory vs. repressive cosmopolitanismp. 71
European Empire and the transcendence of the nation-statep. 72
The function of the nation-states in the European Empirep. 72
The modus operandi of the European Empirep. 75
European sovereignty as a positive-sum gamep. 77
The politics of interdependencep. 79
The politics of golden handcuffs: on the reflexive self-interest of cosmopolitan statesp. 81
Capital of trust: obligating othersp. 84
The cosmopolitan organization of diversity: the European Empire and its contradictionsp. 86
Constitutional tolerancep. 87
Transnational diversityp. 88
Transnational incrementalismp. 89
Ordered pluralismp. 90
Reflexive decisionismp. 91
Multiple membershipsp. 92
European Social Space: On the Social Dynamics of Variable Bordersp. 94
On the Europe-blindness of sociology: critique of the fixation of Europe research on the statep. 94
Horizontal Europeanization: questions, indicators, empirical developmentsp. 98
Languagep. 99
Identityp. 102
Educationp. 105
Educational curriculumsp. 105
Educational mobilityp. 108
The economyp. 109
Labour marketp. 109
Companiesp. 112
Empirical cosmopolitan social theory of Europeanizationp. 113
The problemp. 113
European society as interdependencep. 117
European society as mobilityp. 120
European integration through European expansionp. 122
The internalization of external conflictsp. 124
European society as civil societyp. 125
The uncoupling of nation and civil rightsp. 125
Civil society from above?p. 127
European society as civilizationp. 129
European society as memoryp. 131
Strategies of European Cosmopolitanizationp. 136
European cosmopolitanization as a meta-power gamep. 137
Strategies of Europeanizationp. 141
State strategiesp. 142
Nationalistic egoismp. 143
Intergovernmental minimalismp. 143
Cosmopolitan realismp. 144
Cosmopolitan idealismp. 145
Capital strategiesp. 146
National protectionismp. 146
European protectionismp. 147
European neoliberalismp. 147
Global neoliberalismp. 148
Technocratic strategiesp. 148
Deformations of cosmopolitan Europep. 150
The economic deformationp. 150
The nationalist deformationp. 151
The bureaucratic deformationp. 153
Strategies of European cosmopolitanizationp. 155
Cunning of reason? The side-effects power of the global economy and its limitsp. 155
Cosmopolitanization from below: the role of civil society movementsp. 157
Cosmopolitanization from outside: Europeanization and global political cosmopolitanismp. 158
Cosmopolitanization from above: supranational institutions and civil society movementsp. 160
What makes cosmopolitanization strategies realistic?p. 161
Europeanization as positive-sum gamep. 162
Problems of perception or conversionp. 162
The problematic of interest-transformationp. 162
Risk shock and its strategic utilizationp. 163
Pioneering strategyp. 165
Value strategyp. 167
The prospects of strategies of Europeanization: the examples of migration and provision for the elderlyp. 168
Inequality and Recognition: Europe-Wide Social Conflicts and their Political Dynamicsp. 171
Critique of methodological nationalism in the sociology of inequality and research on the welfare statep. 174
Mobile borders, mobile patterns of inequality?p. 175
European regions as conflict patterns of European inequalitiesp. 178
Mobile 'We' and mobile 'Others'?p. 180
The recognition-inequality dilemma: on the intersection of conflicts over inequality and conflicts over the recognition of differencep. 185
To what extent can and should a cosmopolitan Europe promote solidarity?p. 189
On the Dialectic of Globalization and Europeanization: External Contradictions of Cosmopolitan Europep. 192
The cosmopolitan deficit: critique of the Eurocentric outlook in the debate on Europep. 193
World risk society: outline of a theoryp. 197
General theoremsp. 197
Global risks as a social constructionp. 198
Global risk as reflexive globalityp. 198
War without warsp. 198
Manufactured uncertaintyp. 199
Uncertainty authorizes perceptionp. 199
Blurred lines of conflictp. 200
The politics of empowermentp. 200
The failure of national and international regulatory systemsp. 200
The new politics of uncertaintyp. 201
The politics of risk construction and risk minimizationp. 201
Side effects of side effects: risk paradoxesp. 202
Implications for the social sciencesp. 202
The reality and unreality of global risks as a product of cultural perceptionsp. 203
Divergent logics of global risks: on the distinction between economic, environmental and terrorist risksp. 206
The European public sphere and civil society can be understood and developed as a response to world risk societyp. 209
World risk society, the European Empire and the contradictions of a proactive security policyp. 212
The Iraq War and its lessons for cosmopolitan realismp. 214
What European cosmopolitanism can contribute to global cosmopolitanismp. 219
Cosmopolitan Visions for Europep. 224
Three scenarios of the future Europep. 226
The decay scenariop. 226
The stagnation scenariop. 227
The cosmopolitanization scenariop. 227
Reflexive constitutionalism: constitution and civil society in Europep. 228
Cosmopolitan democracy: possibilities for legitimating the European Empirep. 230
Intervention strategiesp. 234
Inclusion strategiesp. 237
Strategies of recognition of othernessp. 238
Control strategiesp. 239
The principle of the cosmopolitan integration of Europep. 241
Internal integration: the principle of differentiated integrationp. 242
External integration: on the dialectic of differentiation and expansionp. 249
Power and weakness in world risk society - Europe's cosmopolitan realism in a new world orderp. 251
In the European interest: Europe's cosmopolitan interest and cosmopolitan responsibilityp. 255
Dilemmas of cosmopolitan Europep. 258
The universalistic dilemmap. 258
The integration dilemmap. 260
The insecurity dilemmap. 260
The boundary dilemmap. 261
The peace dilemmap. 262
Beyond arrogance and self-betrayal: culture of shared ambivalencep. 263
Notesp. 265
References and Bibliographyp. 277
Indexp. 300
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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