Ireland, Europe and the Global Crisis

For Ireland – along with Spain, Portugal and Greece – membership of ‘Europe’ was seen as an opportunity to escape their historical legacy of ‘underdevelopment’ and become fully integrated into core positions in the global system. Each of these states, and especially Ireland experienced significant g...

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Main Author: Maurice Coakley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2016-03-01
Series:Journal of World-Systems Research
Online Access:http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/634
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author Maurice Coakley
author_facet Maurice Coakley
author_sort Maurice Coakley
collection DOAJ
description For Ireland – along with Spain, Portugal and Greece – membership of ‘Europe’ was seen as an opportunity to escape their historical legacy of ‘underdevelopment’ and become fully integrated into core positions in the global system. Each of these states, and especially Ireland experienced significant growth in the European Union but once the global financial crisis struck, they suffered a deep economic and social crisis, and came to be categorised once again as ‘peripheral’ to Europe. This acute recurrence of a core-periphery divide in the European Union has been accompanied by a rapid diminution of democracy in the EU and its transformation into an increasingly coercive formation. The deprivation programmes imposed by the EU on the peripheral societies has not only damaged growth in the European economy, they have hugely diminished the legitimacy of the European integration project. The essay explores the roots of Europe’s changing power structures and assesses the implications of the Eurozone crisis for the future of the European integration project.
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spelling doaj.art-e902410c7dc246fb80d468ec0bd4285d2022-12-21T17:44:58ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghJournal of World-Systems Research1076-156X2016-03-0122117720110.5195/jwsr.2016.634616Ireland, Europe and the Global CrisisMaurice Coakley0Griffith College, DublinFor Ireland – along with Spain, Portugal and Greece – membership of ‘Europe’ was seen as an opportunity to escape their historical legacy of ‘underdevelopment’ and become fully integrated into core positions in the global system. Each of these states, and especially Ireland experienced significant growth in the European Union but once the global financial crisis struck, they suffered a deep economic and social crisis, and came to be categorised once again as ‘peripheral’ to Europe. This acute recurrence of a core-periphery divide in the European Union has been accompanied by a rapid diminution of democracy in the EU and its transformation into an increasingly coercive formation. The deprivation programmes imposed by the EU on the peripheral societies has not only damaged growth in the European economy, they have hugely diminished the legitimacy of the European integration project. The essay explores the roots of Europe’s changing power structures and assesses the implications of the Eurozone crisis for the future of the European integration project.http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/634
spellingShingle Maurice Coakley
Ireland, Europe and the Global Crisis
Journal of World-Systems Research
title Ireland, Europe and the Global Crisis
title_full Ireland, Europe and the Global Crisis
title_fullStr Ireland, Europe and the Global Crisis
title_full_unstemmed Ireland, Europe and the Global Crisis
title_short Ireland, Europe and the Global Crisis
title_sort ireland europe and the global crisis
url http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/634
work_keys_str_mv AT mauricecoakley irelandeuropeandtheglobalcrisis