Contents : presentation · handbooks · sessions · links
François BriatteThis page offers an alternative syllabus to the actual course, which is taught in French. I wrote the syllabus to document the references I use to prepare the course, and to help English-speaking students to locate recent literature. Even more references are available from other syllabi, such as Jonathan Slapin's.
Erik Jones, Anand Menon and Stephen Weatherill (eds), Oxford Handbook of the European Union, (Oxford University Press, f. 2011)
Helen Wallace, Mark Pollack, and Alasdair Young (eds), Policy-Making in the European Union, 6th ed. (Oxford University Press, 2010)
Antje Wiener and Thomas Diez (eds), European Integration Theory, 2nd ed. (Oxford University Press, 2009)
Ernst Haas, The Uniting of Europe (Stanford University Press, 1958)
Andrew Moravcsik and Frank Schimmelfennig, “Liberal Intergovernmentalism” (in Wiener and Diez)
Andrew Moravcsik, The Choice for Europe (Cambridge University Press, 1997)
Craig Parsons, “Ideas, Position, and Supranationality” (in Daniel Béland and Robert Cox, eds, Ideas and Politics in Social Science Research, 2010).
Paul Pierson, “The Path to European Integration: A Historical-Institutionalist Analysis” (in Wayne Sandholtz and Alec Stone Sweet, eds, European Integration and Supranational Governance, 1998)
Wayne Sandholtz and Alec Stone Sweet, “Neofunctionalism and Supranational Governance” (in Jones et al.)
Arne Niemann and Philippe Schmitter, “Neofunctionalism”, (in Wiener and Diez)
Thomas Risse, “Social Constructivism and European Integration” (in Wiener and Diez)
Alec Stone Sweet and Neil Fligstein, Constructing Markets and Polities: An Institutionalist Account of European Integration” (American Journal of Sociology, 2002)
Charles Tilly, Coercion, Capital, and European States (Wiley-Blackwell, 1992)
Matthew Loveless and Robert Rohrschneider, “Public Perceptions of the EU as a System of Governance” (LREG, 2008)
Fritz Scharpf, Governing in Europe, esp. ch. 2 (Oxford University Press, 1999)
Fritz Scharpf, “The Double Asymmetry of European Integration” (MPIfG paper, 2009)
Guido Tabellini, “Principles of Policymaking in the European Union: An Economic Perspective” (CESifo Economic Studies, 2003)
Helen Wallace, “An Institutional Anatomy and Five Policy Modes” (in Wallace et al.)
Alasdair Young, “The European Policy Process in Comparative Perspective” (in Wallace et al.)
Mathew Gabel and Clifford Carrubba, “The European Court of Justice as an Engine of Economic Integration: Reconsidering Evidence that the ECJ has Expanded Economic Exchange in Europe” (working paper, 2009)
Adrienne Héritier, Explaining Institutional Change in Europe (Oxford University Press, 2007)
Joe Jupille, Procedural Politics: Issues, Influence, and Institutional Choice in the European Union, ch. 2–3 (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
George Tsebelis, Veto Players, esp. ch. 11 (Princeton University Press, 2002)
Alec Stone Sweet, “The European Court of Justice and the Judicialization of EU Governance” (LREG, 2010)
Joseph Weiler and Ulrich Haltern, “Integration Through Law” (in Wiener and Diez)
Ulrich Sedelmeier, “Enlargement” (in Wallace et al.)
Guido Tabellini, “Will it Last? An Economic Perspective on the Constitutional Treaty” (working paper, 2003)
George Tsebelis and Sven Proksch, “The Art of Political Manipulation in the European Convention” (JCMS, 2007)
Joseph Weiler, “On the Distinction between Values and Virtues in the Process of European Integration” (International School For Law and Justice paper, 2010)
Joseph Weiler and Marlene Wind (eds), European Constitutionalism Beyond the State (Cambridge University Press, 2003)
Barry Eichengreen, The European Economy since 1945: Coordinated Capitalism and Beyond (Princeton University Press, 2006)
Barry Eichengreen and Andrea Boltho, “The Economic Impact of European Integration” (in Steve Broadberry and Kevin O'Rourke, The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Europe, 2010)
Dermot Hodson, “Economic and Monetary Union” (in Wallace et al.)
David Howarth and Tal Sadeh, “The Ever Incomplete Single Market: Differentiation and the Evolving Frontier of Integration” (Journal of European Public Policy, 2010)
L. Bini Smaghi and Guido Tabellini, “How to Improve Economic Governance? The Coordination of Macroeconomic Policies in Europe” (Aspen European Dialogue, 2009)
Alasdair Young, “The Single Market” (in Wallace et al.)
James A. Caporaso and Sidney Tarrow, “Polanyi in Brussels: Supranational Institutions and the Transnational Embedding of Markets” (International Organization, 2009)
Maurizio Ferrera, The Boundaries of Welfare: European Integration and the New Spatial Politics of Social Protection (Oxford University Press, 2005) · book review symposium (Socio-Economic Review, 2008)
Martin Höpner and Armin Schäfer, “Polanyi in Brussels? Embeddedness and the Three Dimensions of European Economic Integration” (MPIfG Discussion Paper 10/8)
Achim Kemmerling, “Does Europeanization Lead to Policy Convergence? The Role of the Single Market in Shaping National Tax Policies” (Journal of European Public Policy, 2010)
Stephan Leibfried, “Social Policy” (in Wallace et al.)
Bruno Palier and Philippe Pochet, “Toward a European Social Policy–At Last?” (in Nicolas Jabko and Craig Parsons, The State of the European Union, vol. 7, Oxford University Press, 2005)
Scott Greer, The Politics of European Union Health Policies (Open University Press, 2009)
Andrea Lenschow, “Environmental Policy” (in Wallace et al.)
Matthew Gabel and Kenneth Scheve, “Mixed Messages: Party Dissent and Mass Opinion on European Integration” (European Union Politics, 2007)
Simon Hix and Michael Marsh, “Punishment or Protest? Understanding European Parliament Elections” (Journal of Politics, 2007)
Craig Parsons and Till Weber, “Cross-Cutting Issues and Party Strategy in the European Union” (Comparative Political Studies, 2011).
Till Weber, “When the Cat Is Away the Mice Will Play: Why Elections to the European Parliament Are About Europe After All” (Politique européenne, 2009)
Bastian Giegerich and William Wallace, “Foreign and Security Policy” (in Wallace et al.)
The list is a slightly revised version of the one given in the actual course.
