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Germany and the Transnational Building Blocks for Post-National Community
Hardback

Germany and the Transnational Building Blocks for Post-National Community

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This work assesses the economic prospects for post-national social coherence transcending the traditional nation-state, with a focus on events in Germany. European institutional integration has been seen as a stabilizing alternative to the nation-state system; a system that resulted in two devastating world wars. However, economic interests appear to have been more effective instruments of transnational integration in Europe. Further, until 1989, part of this alternative vision was a divided Germany. The book explicitly links a focus upon the Federal Republic, central to post-Cold War Europe’s future, with a study of private business, perhaps the most indispensable agent of Germany’s post-1945 rehabilitation. Business support has been imperative to European integration. Nonetheless, if the European Union, Phillips argues, is attractive to members or potential members only for economic reasons, then no matter how wealthy its constituent parts may be, potential harmful effects of interstate competition - which the European movement sought to circumvent - will continue to pose a threat to social coherence of the EU in particular, the Continent in general, and the world beyond, still founded on nation-state structures. With the aid of analysis of companies largely perceived as being German, but which are increasingly transnational, Phillips shows how interdependent business needs may overcome nationalist and institutional conceptions in the transnational integration processes.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
ABC-CLIO
Country
United States
Date
30 August 2000
Pages
208
ISBN
9780275964900

This work assesses the economic prospects for post-national social coherence transcending the traditional nation-state, with a focus on events in Germany. European institutional integration has been seen as a stabilizing alternative to the nation-state system; a system that resulted in two devastating world wars. However, economic interests appear to have been more effective instruments of transnational integration in Europe. Further, until 1989, part of this alternative vision was a divided Germany. The book explicitly links a focus upon the Federal Republic, central to post-Cold War Europe’s future, with a study of private business, perhaps the most indispensable agent of Germany’s post-1945 rehabilitation. Business support has been imperative to European integration. Nonetheless, if the European Union, Phillips argues, is attractive to members or potential members only for economic reasons, then no matter how wealthy its constituent parts may be, potential harmful effects of interstate competition - which the European movement sought to circumvent - will continue to pose a threat to social coherence of the EU in particular, the Continent in general, and the world beyond, still founded on nation-state structures. With the aid of analysis of companies largely perceived as being German, but which are increasingly transnational, Phillips shows how interdependent business needs may overcome nationalist and institutional conceptions in the transnational integration processes.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
ABC-CLIO
Country
United States
Date
30 August 2000
Pages
208
ISBN
9780275964900