TY - BOOK ID - 6829426 TI - Europeanization : institution, identities and citizenship AU - Harmsen, Robert AU - Wilson, Thomas M. PY - 2000 VL - 14 14 SN - 9042014237 9004333363 9789042014237 904201413X 9789042014138 PB - Amsterdam: Rodopi, DB - UniCat KW - European federation. KW - Nationalism KW - Citizenship KW - 316.75 EUR KW - 323.11 EUR KW - Consciousness, National KW - Identity, National KW - National consciousness KW - National identity KW - International relations KW - Patriotism KW - Political science KW - Autonomy and independence movements KW - Internationalism KW - Political messianism KW - Burgerschap. KW - Citizenship. KW - Citoyenneté européenne. KW - Construction européenne. KW - EU Member State. KW - European citizenship. KW - European identity. KW - European integration. KW - European official. KW - Europese integratie. KW - Europäische Integration. KW - Idée européenne. KW - Nationalism. KW - Nationalisme KW - Staatsangehörigkeit. KW - UE/CE Intégration. KW - Verwaltung. KW - citoyenneté européenne. KW - fonctionnaire européen. KW - gouvernance. KW - governance. KW - histoire. KW - history. KW - identité européenne. KW - intégration européenne. KW - intégration sociale. KW - social integration. KW - État membre UE. KW - European Union countries. KW - Nationalism - European Union countries. KW - Citizenship - European Union countries. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:6829426 AB - The theme of Europeanization has, in recent years, come to figure prominently in a wide range of social science analyses concerning both the process of European integration and broader patterns of change in contemporary Europe. Yet, though increasingly a staple of academic discourse, no widely accepted definition of the term has emerged. This volume of the European Studies represents one of the first interdisciplinary attempts to examine the manifold uses and possibilities of a Europeanization problematic. An international team of contributors drawn from the disciplines of Politics, Sociology, History, Anthropology, and Law explore processes of institution-building and identity formation through the optic of Europeanization. Their work offers new insights as regards the development of European integration, pointing particularly to the need for a genuinely interdisciplinary European Studies which encompasses, but is not limited to, the study of the European Union. ER -