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In Pursuit of Influence

The Netherlands’ European Policy during the Formative Years of the European Union, 1952-1973

by Anjo Harryvan (Author)
©2009 Monographs 286 Pages

Summary

As one of the six founding member-states of the European Union, the Netherlands has been at the heart of the European integration project from its inception. Looking back on the Netherlands’ role in European cooperation and integration during the 1950s and 1960s, Joseph Luns, the country’s long-standing Foreign Minister, depicted himself as an exponent of a «Dutch vision». This vision, Luns suggested, enabled the country to act as a leading force in Europe, thus demonstrating that in specific constellations in international affairs, a middle-sized or even a small country can play an important role.
What was this «Dutch vision» of Europe and was Luns right in ascribing so much importance to it? In this book, the author sets out to investigate whether, under which conditions and by what means the Netherlands has exerted an «engineering influence» on the economic and institutional architecture of the European Union. It sheds fresh light on the policies of the Netherlands and its Benelux partners in the process of making Europe as we know it today.
Achieving the Common Market may well be considered the ultimate success of contemporary Dutch diplomacy.

Details

Pages
286
Year
2009
ISBN (Softcover)
9789052014975
Language
English
Keywords
Niederlande Europäische Integration Geschichte 1952-1973 petits pays La campagne hollandaise Le Benelux Außenpolitik Seconde Guerre mondiale Supranationalisme
Published
Bruxelles, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2009. 286 pp., 3 tables

Biographical notes

Anjo Harryvan (Author)

The Author: Anjo G. Harryvan studied history and law at the Free University of Amsterdam and was awarded a Ph.D. in History by the European University Institute in Florence. He lectures in international relations at Rijksuniversiteit Groningen.

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Title: In Pursuit of Influence