Changing the Guard in Brussels: An Insider's View of the EC Presidency

Author:   Guy de Bassompierre
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Volume:   No. 135
ISBN:  

9780275931865


Pages:   179
Publication Date:   02 November 1988
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Changing the Guard in Brussels: An Insider's View of the EC Presidency


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Author:   Guy de Bassompierre
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Praeger Publishers Inc
Volume:   No. 135
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 23.00cm
Weight:   0.413kg
ISBN:  

9780275931865


ISBN 10:   0275931862
Pages:   179
Publication Date:   02 November 1988
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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"?As the European Economic Community moves toward a full economic union in 1992, De Bassompierre suggests that the world views it as an economic giant but a political dwarf.' Drawing on his scholarly training and on his experience as a diplomat in the EEC, the author probes the records of the political institutions of the European Community to find ways to increase its political stature. He chooses to focus on the presidency of the Council of Ministers, an office that rotates every six months among the 12 member nations. He also analyzes other councils and institutions that are part of the complex evolving political structures of a United Europe.' In a short volume De Bassompierre successfully links the emerging political patterns to the overall economic integration endeavor. He concludes that this condominium of 12 sovereign nations offers an unparalleled adventure for the national bureaucracies in managing what is, in effect, a global superpower in the making.' Of broader appeal than its title suggests. Valuable for upper-division students in all colleges and universities.?-Choice ""As the European Economic Community moves toward a full economic union in 1992, De Bassompierre suggests that the world views it as an economic giant but a political dwarf.' Drawing on his scholarly training and on his experience as a diplomat in the EEC, the author probes the records of the political institutions of the European Community to find ways to increase its political stature. He chooses to focus on the presidency of the Council of Ministers, an office that rotates every six months among the 12 member nations. He also analyzes other councils and institutions that are part of the complex evolving political structures of a United Europe.' In a short volume De Bassompierre successfully links the emerging political patterns to the overall economic integration endeavor. He concludes that this condominium of 12 sovereign nations offers an unparalleled adventure for the national bureaucracies in managing what is, in effect, a global superpower in the making.' Of broader appeal than its title suggests. Valuable for upper-division students in all colleges and universities.""-Choice"


As the European Economic Community moves toward a full economic union in 1992, De Bassompierre suggests that the world views it as an economic giant but a political dwarf.' Drawing on his scholarly training and on his experience as a diplomat in the EEC, the author probes the records of the political institutions of the European Community to find ways to increase its political stature. He chooses to focus on the presidency of the Council of Ministers, an office that rotates every six months among the 12 member nations. He also analyzes other councils and institutions that are part of the complex evolving political structures of a United Europe.' In a short volume De Bassompierre successfully links the emerging political patterns to the overall economic integration endeavor. He concludes that this condominium of 12 sovereign nations offers an unparalleled adventure for the national bureaucracies in managing what is, in effect, a global superpower in the making.' Of broader appeal than its title suggests. Valuable for upper-division students in all colleges and universities. -Choice ?As the European Economic Community moves toward a full economic union in 1992, De Bassompierre suggests that the world views it as an economic giant but a political dwarf.' Drawing on his scholarly training and on his experience as a diplomat in the EEC, the author probes the records of the political institutions of the European Community to find ways to increase its political stature. He chooses to focus on the presidency of the Council of Ministers, an office that rotates every six months among the 12 member nations. He also analyzes other councils and institutions that are part of the complex evolving political structures of a United Europe.' In a short volume De Bassompierre successfully links the emerging political patterns to the overall economic integration endeavor. He concludes that this condominium of 12 sovereign nations offers an unparalleled adventure for the national bureaucracies in managing what is, in effect, a global superpower in the making.' Of broader appeal than its title suggests. Valuable for upper-division students in all colleges and universities.?-Choice


?As the European Economic Community moves toward a full economic union in 1992, De Bassompierre suggests that the world views it as an economic giant but a political dwarf.' Drawing on his scholarly training and on his experience as a diplomat in the EEC, the author probes the records of the political institutions of the European Community to find ways to increase its political stature. He chooses to focus on the presidency of the Council of Ministers, an office that rotates every six months among the 12 member nations. He also analyzes other councils and institutions that are part of the complex evolving political structures of a United Europe.' In a short volume De Bassompierre successfully links the emerging political patterns to the overall economic integration endeavor. He concludes that this condominium of 12 sovereign nations offers an unparalleled adventure for the national bureaucracies in managing what is, in effect, a global superpower in the making.' Of broader appeal than its title suggests. Valuable for upper-division students in all colleges and universities.?-Choice


Author Information

GUY DE BASSOMPIERRE is minister counselor (economic and commercial at the Belgian Embassy in Washington, D.C. Most recently he was a visiting scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (1987-1988). Previously he served as adviser on European affairs to the Belgian minister of external relations.

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