Enhanced by an accessible writing style and a variety of pedagogical resources, Politics in the European Union offers an up-to-date, balanced, and comprehensive introduction to the field. The third edition features a new coauthor, Simon Bulmer, and adds chapters on the impact of the Lisbon Treaty; environmental policy; and freedom, security, and justice. Divided into four sections--theory, history, institutions, and policies--it opens with detailed coverage of key theoretical concepts, which are also integrated and referred back to throughout the book in order to help students draw links between the EU in theory and in practice.
Ideal for students who are approaching the subject for the first time, Politics in the European Union, Third Edition, is accompanied by an extensive Companion Website. The site contains resources for students--an interactive map of Europe, an interactive timeline of European integration, multiple-choice questions, a flashcard glossary, and related links--and instructors--PowerPoint-based slides (new to this edition), essay questions, seminar questions and activities, and figures and tables from the book.
This is one of two such books I bought on sale for a fraction of the cover price. At the price I paid it was a real bargain. A textbook on European politics, it covers the history of the European union, how the institutions evolved and developed, how they work, the political context in which they arose and how the policy areas of the union developed too.
If you are not interested in EU politics, it will not be for you, and yet having read it, I am aghast at how little of this information is ever taught or disseminated to the public. No wonder our EU debates are so uninformed and so easily hijacked by propagandists.
To be clear, this is not a blindly pro-EU textbook. The book describes EU successes and failures. It describes problems that had to be addressed. The chapter on the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) was the most enlightening read I can remember on the subject, explaining how and why the CAP was first created and why it caused food mountains, and how successive reforms were required to fix this, and how these were implemented over the last couple of decades. It is clear that the EU did engage in dumping of products, but also explains how this was stopped (and why).
That level of analysis is maintained throughout. This book describes the EU, warts and all, but would completely skewer and lay to rest so many ridiculous old canards from the Brexit debate.
A very interesting work that will sadly not get much attention because it is, after all, a text book on a subject that most people are not really very interested in.
So I will say although it may be a bit of a dry read. If you want to understand the fundamentals of the European Union’s functions and powers in society it’s a very informative start. I would say particularly from a regulatory and political perspective, monetary policy not covered however, it breaks down the systems pretty well. If you like EU politics and need to understand the fundamentals this is the book for you! If not dont read !