ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Core Internal and External Challenges to European Integration

European Politics
European Union
Euroscepticism
Brexit
European Parliament
Eurozone
Member States
S16
Ana E. Juncos
University of Bristol
Daniel Naurin
Universitetet i Oslo

Endorsed by the ECPR Standing Group on European Union


Abstract

Over recent years, the EU has had to deal with an increasing number of internal and external challenges. Internally, the EU is still grappling with the consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic, the migration crisis, and the exit of the UK, as well as the populist and illiberal challenge to the EU’s core values of democracy and the rule of law. The manifestations of some of these crises have been so prolonged and recurring that they raise the question of whether they represent systemic flaws that call into question the long-term prospects of European integration. At the same time, we have witnessed a renewed momentum behind integration, for instance, with the launch of the Recovery and Resilience Fund, the European Green Deal, new initiatives in the area of energy such as REPowerEU, candidate status granted to Ukraine and Moldova, and increasing public support for EU integration. Externally, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and the return of war to Europe poses one of the biggest challenges to the EU, not only as a security actor, but also in other areas such as energy, food security and refugee protection, to mention a few. The war is taking place in a more geopolitically charged international context where actors such as China and Russia regularly contest the foundations of the liberal and multilateral international order. While transatlantic relations have improved with the Biden Presidency, the potential return of a more isolationist and illiberal administration still constitutes a real possibility. With these external challenges putting into question the EU’s regulatory and soft power, we have seen the emergence of new narratives regarding the need to foster strategic autonomy and a more geopolitical Union.
Code Title Details
PRA004 The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on EU governance and attitudes View Panel Details
PRA163 Differentiated integration and implementation in the EU View Panel Details
PRA205 Euroscepticism and attitudes towards the EU View Panel Details
PRA334 New tools and redistribution in EU budget politics View Panel Details
PRA356 Parliaments, citizens and the Future of Europe: synergies or legitimacy clashes ? View Panel Details
PRA393 Politicisation, securitisation and reform in EU migration policy View Panel Details
PRA447 Rule of law backsliding in the EU: Remedies and resistance View Panel Details
PRA480 The EU Single Market in Comparative Perspective View Panel Details
PRA481 The EU's response to Russia's war against Ukraine View Panel Details
PRA486 The impact of the war in Ukraine on EU security and defence policies View Panel Details
PRA502 The politics of accession to the European Union View Panel Details
PRA536 Unpolitics: The Role of Populist Governments in EU Decision-Making View Panel Details
PRA546 Visions and narratives of the EU in times of crises View Panel Details
VIR552 Where does ‘the Elysée barometer’ stand 60 years after the signature of the Treaty? View Panel Details