Lexington Books
Pages: 294
Trim: 6½ x 9⅛
978-0-7391-9481-2 • Hardback • September 2014 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-0-7391-9482-9 • eBook • September 2014 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
Natalie J. Doyle is senior lecturer in French and European studies at Monash University and deputy director of the Monash European and European Union Centre.
Lorenza Sebesta, historian, is Jean Monnet professor ad personam at the campus of the University of Bologna in Buenos Aires.
Chapter 1: Interwar plans for European economic integration: an overview
Pierre Tilly and Michel Dumoulin
Chapter 2: International municipalism between the wars: local government as modernizing actors
Mariana Luna Pont
Chapter 3: Talcott Parsons, Carl J. Friedrich and the conceptualization of regional integration
Flora Anderson
Chapter 4: Theories of modernization in Latin America
José Paradiso
Chapter 5: Alexandre Kojève and the re-invention of modernity: the European Communities as the “End of History”
Lorenza Sebesta
Chapter 6: Judicial globalization: the dialogue between the Inter-American and European Courts of Human Rights
Beatriz Larrain
Chapter 7: Agencies to modernize integration? The European Union and Mercosur as case studies
Sandra Negro
Chapter 8: Government-industry relations in Argentina: trade decisions in Mercosur
Luciana Gil
Chapter 9: Multinational companies and the peripheral automotive spacein Mercosur
Martin Obaya
Chapter 10: The de-politicizing logic of European economic integration
Natalie Doyle
The book, Regional Integration and Modernity: Cross-Atlantic Perspectives, provides a new and deeply knowledgeable analysis of the integration processes in Europe and Latin America in the context of modernity. The book takes an interdisciplinary approach, including new regionalism theory, that supports the contention that regional integration is a socially constructed phenomenon. The book is, therefore, a valuable contribution to comparative regional integration studies.— Jody Jensen, director of International Relations at the Institute of Social and European Studies
In this intellectually exciting series of essays the research team assembled by Natalie Doyle and Lorenza Sebesta reveal the diverse strands of European and inter-American ideas that advanced regional integration as a key component of modernization. We meet some familiar (and less familiar) thinkers in a new optic as we are provided a trans-Atlantic genealogy of reformist and federalist initiatives through the course of the twentieth century.— Charles Maier, Harvard University