Print

Print


Early Career Workshop: Political Theory of European Integration, 4 & 5 June
2015

ACCESS EUROPE in collaboration with the Amsterdam Centre for Political
Thought

Presenters: Jan Pieter Beetz (Exeter), Luigi Corrias (VU Amsterdam, Law),
Markus Patberg (Hamburg), Haye Hazenberg (Leuven), Juri Viehoff (Zurich),
Bertjan Wolthuis (VU Amsterdam, Law),  Jared Sonnicksen (TU Darmstadt),
Antoinette Scherz (Frankfurt), Alessio Lo Giudice (Catania), Joseph Lacey
(EUI Florence) , Lyn Tjon Soei Len (UvA, Law), and Tom Theuns (SciPo).

Senior discussants: Richard Bellamy (EUI/UCL); Glyn Morgan (Syracuse
University); and Ben Crum (VU University Amsterdam).


There is little doubt that European integration offers a wonderful
laboratory for contemporary political theory as it challenges established
norms within the confines of the European nation-states and, at the same
time, opens up new transnational and supranational domains that need to be
understood and evaluated on their own distinctive terms. In light of that
promise, political theorists have actually been quite slow to engage with
European integration. Of course, there is the continuing debate on the EU’s
democratic deficit, but notably it is more often used as a background for
empirical political science than that it is thoroughly probed in
theoretical terms. Legal scholarship on European integration has yielded a
more coherent body of normative thinking, as is for instance also reflected
by the contributions to the edited volume by Wiener and Neyer (OUP 2010).
At the same time, the debate on global justice flourishes in political
philosophy, but there have been very few attempts to project that debate on
the European context. In short, despite notably individual interventions,
there is so far little of a coherent body of political theorizing on
European Integration and the Union.

This workshop aims to contribute to a more systematic debate among
theorists of European integration by assembling a selected number of
scholars in the early stages of their career who have made their first
notable interventions in the debate. They span the disciplines of legal and
political theory and come from different national backgrounds. The workshop
is to serve as a platform for making acquaintances, to present on-going
work (not necessarily fully-finished papers), and (depending on the work
presented) to serve as a platform for one or two collective publications
(preferably special issues).

Time and place

From Thursday 4 June 2015 (9:00) to Friday 5 June (16:30)
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam: Metropolitan Building, Buitenveldertselaan
3-7, Room Z-009.

Contact: [log in to unmask]
Programme

Each presenter will have 15 minutes to introduce his or her paper. The
discussant will offer their perspective on each paper in the subsequent 15
minutes.  After short responses by the discussants, the discussion is
opened up to the floor for the remaining time.


Enzo Rossi
Dept of Political Science, University of Amsterdam
Co-editor, European Journal of Political Theory
uva.academia.edu/enzorossi