The European Union and the Member States: two different perceptions of border
AUTOR(ES)
Cierco, Teresa, Silva, Jorge Tavares da
FONTE
Rev. bras. polít. int.
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO
24/05/2016
RESUMO
Abstract In this article we analyze two different perceptions of border inside Europe. On the one hand, we have the perception idealized by the European Union as an international organization, which believes that states benefit more from cooperation and dilution of borders in a common space than from keeping its borders as a symbol of its sovereignty. On the other hand, we have the European member states, taken individually, with particular interests and goals that, given the threat of illegal immigration, which is currently felt in the large-scale Europe, adopt a realistic perception of the border, and look at each territory as a space that needs protection from external threats. Following this argument, we reason that the current construction of walls in several European countries reflects the rebirth of a realistic perception of the border, and this is one more challenge for Europe regarding its unity and solidarity. Is this the end of the Schengen Agreement? What is going to happen to the European project if each state unilaterally adopts a strategy to deal with illegal immigration and refugees that are coming to Europe? Can immigration lead to a retrocession of the EU idealist significance of border?
Documentos Relacionados
- 1 - Brazil and the United States: Two Centuries of Relations
- O direito da integração nas constituições dos Estados membros da União Europeia
- Federalismo e suas variantes: do modelo norte-americano à União Européia
- Two Different Bacillus thuringiensis Delta-Endotoxin Receptors in the Midgut Brush Border Membrane of the European Corn Borer, Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae)
- The European Union's Superpower Revisited