Why Europe Will Run the 21st CenturyHarperCollins UK, 25.08.2011 - 264 Seiten Those who believe Europe to be weak and ineffectual are wrong. Turning conventional wisdom on its head Why Europe Will Run the 21st Century sets out a vision for a century in which Europe will dominate, not America. This is the book that will make your mind up about Europe. Those who believe Europe is weak and ineffectual are wrong. Turning conventional wisdom on its head, Mark Leonard, one of the UK's most visionary thinkers, argues that Europe is remaking the world in its own image. Europe only looks dead because it is seen through American eyes. But America's reach is shallow and narrow. It can bribe, bully or impose its will anywhere in the world, but when its back is turned its potency wanes. Europe's reach is broad and deep, spreading its values from Albania to Zambia. It brings other countries into its orbit rather than defining itself against them, and once countries come under the influence of its laws and customs they are changed for ever. This book sets up a challenge: to regard Europe not as a tangle of bureaucracy and regulation, but as a revolutionary model for the future. We cannot afford to forget that Europe was founded to protect us against war and that it is now key to the spread of democracy. ‘Why Europe Will Run the 21st Century’ addresses Europe's place in the world, looks to the past and the future and argues, provocatively, that it can and will shape a new and better world order. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 5
... in many of the world's leading newspapers and journals , and his consultancy work with governments and business . He lives in Camden Town . WWW.MARKLEONARD.NET why europe will run the 21st century MARK LEONARD FOURTH.
... introduce constitutional protection for eth- nic minorities to be allowed to join the EU ; when an Islamist government in Turkey abandons its own party's proposals for a penal code that makes adultery a crime pun- ishable by 7 Mark Leonard.
... governments of France and Germany were sucked into end- less negotiations , they were less likely to go to war . The best way to change the facts on the ground was through gradual change - what Monnet called engrenage . Each agreement ...
... governments , which meant , quite simply , that they got to know each other very well . They would therefore think spontaneously of other things they could do together . Monnet's bizarre working practices set a pattern that the European ...
... governments are the agents of European power , the European Commission can remain small and discreet . The European Commission has a to- tal staff of 22,000 less than many large city councils . This gives it barely half a civil servant ...
Inhalt
1 | |
The Revolutionary Power of Passive | 73 |
The European Way of | 99 |
The European Rescue of National | 129 |
Europe at 50 | 149 |
Brussels and the Beijing Consensus | 167 |
The End of the American World | 183 |
The Regional Domino Effect | 203 |