Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity. / Manners, Ian James.

Transnational Solidarity: Concept, Challenges and Opportunities. red. / Helle Krunke; Hanne Petersen; Ian Manners. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2020. s. 76-100.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Manners, IJ 2020, Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity. i H Krunke, H Petersen & I Manners (red), Transnational Solidarity: Concept, Challenges and Opportunities. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, s. 76-100. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108766593

APA

Manners, I. J. (2020). Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity. I H. Krunke, H. Petersen, & I. Manners (red.), Transnational Solidarity: Concept, Challenges and Opportunities (s. 76-100). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108766593

Vancouver

Manners IJ. Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity. I Krunke H, Petersen H, Manners I, red., Transnational Solidarity: Concept, Challenges and Opportunities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2020. s. 76-100 https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108766593

Author

Manners, Ian James. / Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity. Transnational Solidarity: Concept, Challenges and Opportunities. red. / Helle Krunke ; Hanne Petersen ; Ian Manners. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2020. s. 76-100

Bibtex

@inbook{27dd21a9dcab49c0aa7ed7423e61ed3b,
title = "Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity",
abstract = "The chapter explores the symbols and myths of EU transnational solidarity through a three-fold analysis of transnational solidarity within, across, and beyond the EU. Based on post-Cold War study of the EU in global politics over the past three decades, the chapter compares and contrasts transnational solidarity from communitarian and cosmopolitan perspectives before advocating a cosmopolitical understanding of EU transnational solidarity in a global context. The chapter proceeds by delineating and theorising the concepts used, including symbols and myths, European integration, and transnational solidarity in order to prepare the ground for the next three analytical sections. Section two examines transnational solidarity within the EU by looking at symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities. Section three looks across the borders of the EU to consider the symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities within the European neighbourhood. Section four goes beyond the EU to analyse the symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities with distantly situated others through EU external actions. The chapter concludes by arguing the need to clearly identify, in line with Carol Gould , transnational EU solidarities as overlapping networks of relations that share and support actions to eliminate oppression or reduce suffering. It is furthered argued that cosmopolitical solidarities that network and share global ethics with local politics are more likely to take actions in concert that are caring and empathic towards distantly situated others.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, European Union, Transnational Solidarity, Symbols, Myths, communitarian, cosmopolitan, cosmopolitical",
author = "Manners, {Ian James}",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1017/9781108766593",
language = "English",
isbn = " 9781108487368",
pages = "76--100",
editor = "Helle Krunke and Hanne Petersen and Ian Manners",
booktitle = "Transnational Solidarity",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Symbols and Myths of European Union Transnational Solidarity

AU - Manners, Ian James

PY - 2020/7

Y1 - 2020/7

N2 - The chapter explores the symbols and myths of EU transnational solidarity through a three-fold analysis of transnational solidarity within, across, and beyond the EU. Based on post-Cold War study of the EU in global politics over the past three decades, the chapter compares and contrasts transnational solidarity from communitarian and cosmopolitan perspectives before advocating a cosmopolitical understanding of EU transnational solidarity in a global context. The chapter proceeds by delineating and theorising the concepts used, including symbols and myths, European integration, and transnational solidarity in order to prepare the ground for the next three analytical sections. Section two examines transnational solidarity within the EU by looking at symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities. Section three looks across the borders of the EU to consider the symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities within the European neighbourhood. Section four goes beyond the EU to analyse the symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities with distantly situated others through EU external actions. The chapter concludes by arguing the need to clearly identify, in line with Carol Gould , transnational EU solidarities as overlapping networks of relations that share and support actions to eliminate oppression or reduce suffering. It is furthered argued that cosmopolitical solidarities that network and share global ethics with local politics are more likely to take actions in concert that are caring and empathic towards distantly situated others.

AB - The chapter explores the symbols and myths of EU transnational solidarity through a three-fold analysis of transnational solidarity within, across, and beyond the EU. Based on post-Cold War study of the EU in global politics over the past three decades, the chapter compares and contrasts transnational solidarity from communitarian and cosmopolitan perspectives before advocating a cosmopolitical understanding of EU transnational solidarity in a global context. The chapter proceeds by delineating and theorising the concepts used, including symbols and myths, European integration, and transnational solidarity in order to prepare the ground for the next three analytical sections. Section two examines transnational solidarity within the EU by looking at symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities. Section three looks across the borders of the EU to consider the symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities within the European neighbourhood. Section four goes beyond the EU to analyse the symbols and myths of communitarian, cosmopolitan, and cosmopolitical solidarities with distantly situated others through EU external actions. The chapter concludes by arguing the need to clearly identify, in line with Carol Gould , transnational EU solidarities as overlapping networks of relations that share and support actions to eliminate oppression or reduce suffering. It is furthered argued that cosmopolitical solidarities that network and share global ethics with local politics are more likely to take actions in concert that are caring and empathic towards distantly situated others.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - European Union

KW - Transnational Solidarity

KW - Symbols

KW - Myths

KW - communitarian

KW - cosmopolitan

KW - cosmopolitical

UR - https://www.cambridge.org/se/academic/subjects/law/public-international-law/transnational-solidarity-concept-challenges-and-opportunities?format=HB

U2 - 10.1017/9781108766593

DO - 10.1017/9781108766593

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9781108487368

SP - 76

EP - 100

BT - Transnational Solidarity

A2 - Krunke, Helle

A2 - Petersen, Hanne

A2 - Manners, Ian

PB - Cambridge University Press

CY - Cambridge

ER -

ID: 233727198