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A Republican Europe of States: Cosmopolitanism, Intergovernmentalism and Democracy in the EU

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Combining international political theory and EU studies, Richard Bellamy provides an original account of the democratic legitimacy of international organisations. He proposes a new interpretation of the EU's democratic failings and how they might be addressed. Drawing on the republican theory of freedom as non-domination, Bellamy proposes a way to combine national popular sovereignty with the pursuit of fair and equitable relations of non-domination among states and their citizens. Applying this approach to the EU, Bellamy shows that its democratic failings lie not with the democratic deficit at the EU level but with a democratic disconnect at the member state level. Rather than shifting democratic authority to the European Parliament, this book argues that the EU needs to reconnect with the different 'demoi' of the member states by empowering national parliaments in the EU policy-making process.

Proposes an innovative republican account of international political justice, centred on securing non-domination between and within democratic states

Applies this theory to the EU, showing how a form of 'republican intergovernmentalism' both describes and can guide the integration process

Offers readers a demoicratic account of the EU's democratic legitimacy, capable of responding to Euroscepticism and Brexit

Author: Bellamy Richard
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 260
ISBN: 9781107678125
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019

Introduction: democratic legitimacy and international institutions – republican intergovernmentalism, cosmopolitan statism, and the demoicratic reconnection of the EU

Part I. Cosmopolitanism, Statism and Republicanism: Democracy, Legitimacy and Sovereignty:
1. Cosmopolitism and statism: global interdependence and national self-determination
2. Justice, legitimacy and republicanism: non-domination and the global circumstances of legitimate politics
3. Sovereignty, republicanism and the democratic legitimacy of the EU
Part II. A Republican EU of Sovereign States: Republican Intergovernmentalism, Demoicracy and Non-Domination:
4. Representing the people's of Europe: addressing the demoicratic disconnect
5. Union citizenship – supra- and post-national, trans-national or inter-national?
6 Differentiated integration and the demoicratic constitution of the EU

Conclusion: the global trilemma, the future of the EU and Brexit.

Richard Bellamy is Professor of Political Science at University College London, and Director of the Max Weber Programme, European University Institute, Florence. His previous books include Political Constitutionalism: A Republican Defence of the Constitutionality of Democracy (Cambridge, 2007), which won the David and Elaine Spitz Prize in 2009, and, as co-editor, The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century Political Thought (Cambridge, 2003).

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