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International Integration: The European and the Universal Process
644
Citations
1
References
1961
Year
Cooperation TheoryFull RetreatInternationalism (Politics)International CooperationNationalismDiscrete Political UnitsInternational RelationsPolitical ScienceEuropean Union LawInternationalizationInternational OrganizationNew YorkEuropean IssueRegional IntegrationInternational IntegrationGlobalizationSocial SciencesGeopolitics
The decline of the nation-state in Europe contrasts with its rise in Africa and Asia, where integration has historically occurred in Europe but disintegration dominates elsewhere. The study asks whether European integration practices can be replicated globally and whether European unity will influence other regions and the UN without deliberate imitation.
The established nation-state is in full retreat in Europe while it is advancing voraciously in Africa and Asia. Integration among discrete political units is a historical fact in Europe, but disintegration seems to be the dominant motif elsewhere. Cannot the example of successful integration in Europe be imitated? Could not the techniques of international and supranational cooperation developed in Luxembourg, Paris, and Brussels be put to use in Accra, Bangkok, and Cairo, as well as on the East River in New York? Or, in a different perspective, will not the progress of unity in Europe inevitably have its integrating repercussions in other regions and at the level of the United Nations even without efforts at conscious imitation?
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