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  1. Who is Afraid of Radical Pluralism? Legal Order and Political Stability in the Postnational Space.Nico Krisch - 2011 - Ratio Juris 24 (4):386-412.
    Constitutional pluralism has become a principal model for understanding the legal and political structure of the European Union. Yet its variants are highly diverse, ranging from moderate “institutional” forms, closer to constitutionalist thinking, to “radical” ones which renounce a common framework to connect the different layers of law at play. Neil MacCormick, whose work was key for the rise of constitutional pluralism, shifted his approach from radical to institutional pluralism over time. This paper reconstructs the reasons for this shift—mainly concerns (...)
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  • Survey article: Unity, diversity and democratic institutions: Lessons from the european union.Johan P. Olsen - 2004 - Journal of Political Philosophy 12 (4):461–495.
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  • (1 other version)The European Regional Integration in the IR Literature:A Review of Scholarly Support and Opposition. [REVIEW]Koos Agnes Katalin - 2011 - Open Journal of Philosophy 1 (2):90.
    Most of what has been written on the ECSC/ EEC/ EC/ EU, has not been done by international relations (IR) theorists, but by comparativists, sociologists, historians, anthropologists, legal scholars, and many others. These writings are in general classified as intergovernmentalist, federalist, and supranationalist (functionalist and neo- functionalist) in most accounts of the theoretical perspectives on the EU (Webb 1983, Rosamond 2000). Wiener and Diez 2004 add a rational choice institutional category, as well, as they think that the policy analysis within (...)
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  • Whither European Citizenship?: Eros and Civilization Revisited.Cris Shore - 2004 - European Journal of Social Theory 7 (1):27-44.
    A claim frequently made about European Citizenship is that by decoupling ‘rights’ from ‘identity’ it challenges us to rethink the classical Westphalian model of citizenship. According to some EU scholars and constitutional experts, this beckons a new form of ‘supranational’ citizenship practice based not on emotional attachments to territory and cultural affinities (‘Eros’), but to the rights and values of a civil society – or what Habermas calls ‘constitutional patriotism’. This article uses anthropological insights to critique these arguments and to (...)
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  • (1 other version)The European Regional Integration in the IR Literature: A Review of Scholarly Support and Opposition. [REVIEW]Agnes Katalin Koos - 2011 - Open Journal of Philosophy 1 (2):90.
    Most of what has been written on the ECSC/ EEC/ EC/ EU, has not been done by international relations theorists, but by comparativists, sociologists, historians, anthropologists, legal scholars, and many others. These writings are in general classified as intergovernmentalist, federalist, and supranationalist in most accounts of the theoretical perspectives on the EU . Wiener and Diez 2004 add a rational choice institutional category, as well, as they think that the policy analysis within the polity developed into an autonomous brand of (...)
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