Europe’s ‘soft-core’ future of differentiated integration
The best model for the EU is one of differentiated integration—but with a soft rather than a hard core of member states.
The best model for the EU is one of differentiated integration—but with a soft rather than a hard core of member states.
The concept of social dialogue has become empty rhetoric, divorced from reality.
For 40 years, elites in rich and poor countries promised neoliberal policies would lead to faster growth and the benefits would trickle down so that everyone would be better off.
On International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, over 50 female union leaders urge stronger action by the incoming European Commission.
For Karin Pettersson, journalism has never been more challenging—and never more important.
For years, Germany's ballooning current-account surplus has rankled the rest of the world. It is a result of policies fully within the government's power to change.
Taking the EU directive on work-life balance off the page will require determined trade-union efforts, including in challenging prejudices.
References to ‘the people’ are misleading. Populism is no democratic corrective.
Branko Milanovic explains how globalisation has allowed small states to become major players and big cities to outgrow their nation-states.
The fossil-fuel industry has been revealed to have invested vast resources in lobbying EU institutions.
Assuming the UK does eventually leave the EU, its next government will need to negotiate new relationships with the rest of the world.
With the UK facing one of the most important elections in decades, the focus should be on the clear programmatic differences between the main parties, rather than weekly polling outcomes.
Adam Tooze dissects how the macroeconomic policy discourse is disabling necessary German, and European, steps forward.
It may be three decades since the Berlin wall came down but too many others have recently proliferated.
The strength of ‘illiberal democracy’ three decades after the fall of the Berlin wall can only be understood by reference to the prior cold-war trajectories of east and west.
The differing paths of the states which emerged after the fall of the wall show how liberty and the rule of law go hand in hand.
Democracy is threatened by politicisation of constitutional courts. Unorthodox tactics are required to restore their role.