It then examines three ‘blind spots’ the EU must attend to, reflecting on the extent to which they have Welcome to Barbieland: European sentiment in the year of wars and elections – ECFR/551 2 been exposed by two major events of the past year: the war in Gaza and the European Parliament election. [...] This part of the EU saw low turnout for the European Parliament election, the normalised presence of Eurosceptic parties and attitudes, and low-key celebrations of the 20th anniversary of joining the bloc. [...] The tenor of much of the campaign across the 27 member states suggested the EU – whose motto expresses a desire to be “united Welcome to Barbieland: European sentiment in the year of wars and elections – ECFR/551 7 . [...] These are the likelier routes if the European political mainstream continues to further legitimise the ‘ethnic’ conception of Europeanness and ignores the voiceless in defining the purpose of the EU. [...] European sentiment In using the concept of the “European sentiment”, we have been inspired by the works of Swiss philosopher and founder of the European Cultural Foundation, Denis de Rougemont, who – in the aftermath of the second world war – wrote about the need to awaken a “ common sentiment of the European.” In the first edition of the European Sentiment Compass, we elaborated on the way this c.
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- 60
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- Germany
Table of Contents
- Welcome to Barbieland 2
- The EUs blind spots 3
- Beyond white Europe 7
- Beyond western Europe 9
- Beyond boomer Europe 16
- What was the EU made for 23
- Make it worthwhile to take part 24
- Reject the ethnic conception of Europeanness 26
- Give substance to the civic conception of Europeanness 27
- Country profiles National trend charts 2005-2024 29
- Methodology 57
- European sentiment 57
- About the author 57
- Acknowledgments 58