
Contents
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30.1 Introduction 30.1 Introduction
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30.2 Britain as an Awkward Partner, 1987–97 30.2 Britain as an Awkward Partner, 1987–97
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30.2.1 Global Structural Change and the Renewed Process of European Integration 30.2.1 Global Structural Change and the Renewed Process of European Integration
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30.2.2 Institutions, Narratives, and the Constraining Impact of Agency on British Statecraft Towards the European Union 30.2.2 Institutions, Narratives, and the Constraining Impact of Agency on British Statecraft Towards the European Union
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30.3 The ‘Normal’ Partner: New Labour and the European Union, 30.3 The ‘Normal’ Partner: New Labour and the European Union,
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30.3.1 Global Structural Change and the Weakening of EU Integrationist Pressure 30.3.1 Global Structural Change and the Weakening of EU Integrationist Pressure
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30.3.2 The Depoliticization of the European Issue in British Politics 30.3.2 The Depoliticization of the European Issue in British Politics
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30.4 Conclusion 30.4 Conclusion
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References References
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30 The European Union
Get accessJim Buller is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of York.
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Published:02 January 2010
Cite
Abstract
This article uses a temporal perspective to fully understand the nature of change in the British government's relations with the European Union (EU). It first examines the reason for Britain's awkwardness, concentrating on the period 1987–97. Moreover, it attempts to document and account for a number of gradual changes that has taken place in Britain's relations with the EU over the last decade or so. It specifically deals with the alterations to the international and European context that has benefited British diplomacy since 1997. The depoliticization of Europe at the domestic level reflects in part a conscious strategy by political agents at the top of the Blair government. It has been argued that a subtle change has taken place in the British government's relations with the EU, and that this trend is the result of a complex interplay of institutional and agential factors.
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