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Europe and the Balkans International Network

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Self-determination and sovereignity in Europe
From historical legacies to the EU external role, 2013
a cura di Stefano Bianchini
Europe and the Balkans International Network n. 35
pp. 288, ISBN 978-88-8063-760-8    € 25.00

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Stefano Bianchini, Self-determination and Sovereignty. European Historical Legacies and Challenges for the Future – An Introduction - PART ONE: The Historical Legacies. Self-Determination and Sovereignty in the 20th Century Perspective: Giuseppe Motta, After Versailles. Territorializing Minority Policies in Central-Eastern Europe - Sara Barbieri, Questioning Versailles: National-Cultural Autonomy in the Post-revolutionary Siberian Context - Elena Dundovich, Building Soviet Federalism and Managing Differences. The Bolshevik Approach to the Rights of Peoples. 1917-1936 - Francesco Caccamo, Managing National Differences in Eastern Europe. Czechoslovak Federalism and its Crisis after 1989. PART TWO - After the Cold War. The European Integration as a new Political Subject: Self-Determination and Sovereignty Reframed: Laura Scichilone, The EEC/EU and Nuclear Safety in Central and Eastern Europe. The Case of Bulgaria: Sovereignty Claims versus European Aspirations - Laura Grazi, Local and Regional Autonomy in the EU Eastern Partnership. Eroding Sovereignty via Sub-national Actors in the EU Neighboring Countries - Federica Di Sarcina, European Gender Equality Policy in the Western Balkans and the challenges of EU political conditionality - PART THREE - Reframing Sovereignty and Managing: Diversities Outside the EU: Leonas Tolvaišis, Kosovo, Vojvodina, and the Demonstration Effect on Serbia's Regionalization - Giorgio Comai, Sovereignty Conflicts and Minority Protection: the Case of Abkhazia - Sara Barbieri, National-cultural Autonomies in Contemporary Russia. Insight into the Tomsk Oblast. PART FOUR - Fostering Inclusiveness: Enlargement Strategies and External Constraints: Ariane Landuyt, Before the Great Enlargement: European Institutions and Minorities in Yugoslavia - Giuliana Laschi, An Enlarged Europe, two Europes or East and West? The EC/EU from Domestic Agent to International Actor of Cooperation - Alessandra Bitumi, Transatlantic Relations "beyond the Curtain": Eastern Europe between the United States and the European Union - Stefano Bianchini, Reassessing Self-determination. European integration and Nation-state Independence facing the Challenges of post-Socialist Europe.

This book focuses on self-determination and sovereignty, encompassing the findings of a two-year research project carried out by a group of Italian senior and junior scholars, most of them historians, but with different academic backgrounds and specializations. Surprisingly enough the topic has rarely been analyzed in Italian academic literature; thus the authors fill a crucial gap in national studies by systematically scrutinizing the historical dynamics of the European continent as a whole, in relation not only to nation-state construction since the end of WW1 and how the interconnections between freedom, peoples, minorities and power dramatically evolved during the last century, but also considering the new role played by EU integration processes since the end of the Cold War.
This original, dynamic and in-depth approach leads the authors to conclude that the persistence of historical legacies, in terms of political cultures of the nation-state, should be considered either in relation to policies implemented as part of the rationale of “nation-state sovereignty”, or in light of EU conditionality, the soft power applied to the EU’s Eastern neighbors, and the impact of the crisis the integration project has endured since 2005, when an increasingly assertive national component began to emerge. The mechanisms in action are actually twofold: they concern power, but also the idea of culture and coexistence. Nationalism has a fierce capacity to reassure groups in their hope to resist change, even when it is unavoidable. On the other hand, the cross-national mobility of peoples is challenging the well-rooted perceptions of unity of cultures and stability of borders, even though – historically – the existence of this “unity and stability” can be easily questioned.
Consequently, the book emphasizes the great responsibility of politics is this regard: at a time when different options are on the agenda, there are critical and far-reaching decisions to be made for all of Europe. National cultures and the national question in the form of political superiority, cultural homogeneity, and social exclusiveness are at stake. They can prevail once again, by imposing the failure of the integrative prospect, but the consequences might be unpredictable.