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Thesis Eleven, Vol. 72, No. 1, 26-45 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0725513603072001133
© 2003 Thesis Eleven Pty, Ltd., SAGE Publications

A Political Identity of the Europeans?

Furio Cerutti

Department of Philosophy, University of Florence, and Center for European Studies, Harvard University. cerutti{at}unifi.it

The peaceful and democratic integration of the European countries cannot be completed if the EU does not become a true, though not-federal, polity. Making the European institutions fully legitimate and accountable requires the development of political identity in a shape which is different from both national and cultural identity and is not merely opposite to diversity and change. Its contents can be seen in a specific set of constitutional values and principles, including a model of social relations, an international standing and a peculiar and unprecedented system of governance. Identity-formation in the EU goes through several channels, but has still to generate a European public sphere, though the source of this difficulty does not lie in the lack of a European people or demos.

Key Words: demos • European union • legitimacy • political identity • public sphere


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