Identity, Interests and Attitudes to European Integration

McLAREN Lauren

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Summary

To what degree do citizens of EU member states support its institutions, and how much do perceptions of those institutions depend upon fundamental feelings of identity? In Identity, Interests and Attitudes to European Integration, Lauren M. McLaren outlines explanations of varying feelings towards the European Union and the integration project, focusing on egoistic self-interest and the perceived threat to one's group. The book introduces new evidence that questions the degree to which Europeans think about the EU in utilitarian terms and contemplates the other lenses through which ordinary citizens might view the EU, particularly those that identify and reject it. Ultimately, the book contends that feelings about the EU may be related more to general xenophobia and out-group rejection than to cost/benefit calculations about whether the EU satisfies one's self-interest.

Table of contents

List of Tables List of Figures List of Acronyms Introduction Opposition to European Integration: The Data Conceptualisation and Measurement Rational Explanations of Support for European Integration Egocentric Utilitarianism Group Conflict Theory and European Integration Symbolic Politics and European Integration: The Role of National Symbols and Identity Pre-Cursors to Group Conflict and Symbolic Threat: Rationality? Attitudes to Policymaking in the EU New Member States, Utilitarianism, Perceived Threat, and Opposition to European Integration Conclusion Notes References Index