The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity

European identity is the first condition for a State to be considered eligible to EU membership. Indeed, Article 49 of the Treaty on the European Union, which regulates the application process for EU membership, enshrines that a State must be ‘European’, without specifying the meaning(s) attached to...

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Main Author: Niessen, Annie
Other Authors: European Studies Unit (ESU)
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/230220
http://www.kaowarsom.be/fr/conferences
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:2268/230220 2023-05-15T16:30:16+02:00 The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity Niessen, Annie European Studies Unit (ESU) 2018-12-07 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/230220 http://www.kaowarsom.be/fr/conferences en eng info:hdl:2268/230220 2268/230220 https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/230220 http://www.kaowarsom.be/fr/conferences undefined ORBi : Université de Liège Law criminology & political science Political science public administration & international relations Droit criminologie & sciences politiques Sciences politiques administration publique & relations internationales scipo Conference Output https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_c94f/ 2018 fttriple 2023-01-22T18:02:36Z European identity is the first condition for a State to be considered eligible to EU membership. Indeed, Article 49 of the Treaty on the European Union, which regulates the application process for EU membership, enshrines that a State must be ‘European’, without specifying the meaning(s) attached to such a qualifier. Various interpretations were provided by the EU institutions in the course of enlargements and membership requests. One of these interpretations is illustrated by the integration, or full assimilation, of some overseas regions into the EU because they have retained ties with one of the EU Member States. Despite their remoted geographical position, these regions were indeed integrated – and not merely associated – in the same capacity as the metropolitan regions, which means that the general provisions of the Treaties apply to these overseas regions. In spite of the fact that this specific option has existed since the Treaty of Rome, different legal provisions for integration have applied to these regions, depending on their status within and ties with the motherland. This poster will provide an overview of the history of the integration of overseas regions into the EEC/EU, as well as the rationale and the dynamics (financial, geopolitical, ‘colonial’, …) behind this process, by relying on a few illustrative cases, such as the French overseas regions (Guadeloupe, Mayotte, Réunion …) and the former integrated Algeria and Greenland. The poster will also display the respective legal integration framework of these cases and the possibility to change their integration/association status enabled by Article 227 TFEU. By presenting the various aspects surrounding the relationship between the overseas regions and the European Union, the poster intends to highlight the historical (colonial) interpretation of European identity and how these regions have eventually become part of the institutional conception of European identity. Other/Unknown Material Greenland Unknown Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic Law
criminology & political science
Political science
public administration & international relations
Droit
criminologie & sciences politiques
Sciences politiques
administration publique & relations internationales
scipo
spellingShingle Law
criminology & political science
Political science
public administration & international relations
Droit
criminologie & sciences politiques
Sciences politiques
administration publique & relations internationales
scipo
Niessen, Annie
The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity
topic_facet Law
criminology & political science
Political science
public administration & international relations
Droit
criminologie & sciences politiques
Sciences politiques
administration publique & relations internationales
scipo
description European identity is the first condition for a State to be considered eligible to EU membership. Indeed, Article 49 of the Treaty on the European Union, which regulates the application process for EU membership, enshrines that a State must be ‘European’, without specifying the meaning(s) attached to such a qualifier. Various interpretations were provided by the EU institutions in the course of enlargements and membership requests. One of these interpretations is illustrated by the integration, or full assimilation, of some overseas regions into the EU because they have retained ties with one of the EU Member States. Despite their remoted geographical position, these regions were indeed integrated – and not merely associated – in the same capacity as the metropolitan regions, which means that the general provisions of the Treaties apply to these overseas regions. In spite of the fact that this specific option has existed since the Treaty of Rome, different legal provisions for integration have applied to these regions, depending on their status within and ties with the motherland. This poster will provide an overview of the history of the integration of overseas regions into the EEC/EU, as well as the rationale and the dynamics (financial, geopolitical, ‘colonial’, …) behind this process, by relying on a few illustrative cases, such as the French overseas regions (Guadeloupe, Mayotte, Réunion …) and the former integrated Algeria and Greenland. The poster will also display the respective legal integration framework of these cases and the possibility to change their integration/association status enabled by Article 227 TFEU. By presenting the various aspects surrounding the relationship between the overseas regions and the European Union, the poster intends to highlight the historical (colonial) interpretation of European identity and how these regions have eventually become part of the institutional conception of European identity.
author2 European Studies Unit (ESU)
format Other/Unknown Material
author Niessen, Annie
author_facet Niessen, Annie
author_sort Niessen, Annie
title The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity
title_short The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity
title_full The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity
title_fullStr The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity
title_full_unstemmed The Overseas Regions and the European Union: Historical Background, Rationale and Dynamics within the Scope of the Institutional Conception of European Identity
title_sort overseas regions and the european union: historical background, rationale and dynamics within the scope of the institutional conception of european identity
publishDate 2018
url https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/230220
http://www.kaowarsom.be/fr/conferences
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op_source ORBi : Université de Liège
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https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/230220
http://www.kaowarsom.be/fr/conferences
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