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Informationen zum Autor Jack Hayward taught politics at the Universities of Sheffield, Keele, Hull, and Oxford, retiring in 1998 as Director of the Oxford Institute of European Studies and Professional Fellow of St. Antony's College. Since then he has been a part-time Research Professor of Politics at the University of Hull. He has also been a Visiting Professor to several French Universities, for one year each at Sorbonne Nouvelle and the Paris Institute of Political Studies, as well as for shorter periods at the Universities of Bordeaux, Grenoble, and Rennes. Klappentext From the outset! the European Community was intended to be leaderless because of the attachment of most of the elites and mass populations to national sovereignty.European integration has nevertheless advanced first thanks to the European Commission! then by an increasingly assertive European Council and Council of Ministers. The limitations! especially in foreign and defence policy! as well as the reduced capacity of the Franco-German tandem to provide impetus and Britain's inability to join or replace them poses continuing problems of leadership. The European Court of Justice enforces agreed policies on laggard national governments! while the European Parliament acts as an ally or constraint on the Commission and the Council of Ministers. The European Union improvises incremental changes and cooperatively muddles along. Zusammenfassung From its antecedents in the 1950s, successive forms of European integration were intended to be leaderless. They have succeeded only too well in demonstrating that much can be achieved without sustained leadership. The attachment to national sovereignty of most of the European elites and mass populations has meant that confederalism has been implicitly accepted for the foreseeable future. This book attempts to clarify three clusters of issues. First, as European integration has advanced, who has provided the impetus? Particular insiders have episodically exerted decisive innovative influence, despite the need to conciliate the jealous champions of national sovereignty. Three case studies are offered: economic and monetary policy, environmental policy and technology policy. The second part examines why the European Union is currently leaderless. The weakened Commission and the increasingly assertive European Council and Council of Ministers have contended for control of agenda-setting but it is in the sphere of foreign and security policy that the EU's logic of leaderlessness has been most conspicuous. Finally, reduced capacity of the Franco-German tandem to offer acceptable leadership and British incapacity to join or replace them in providing overall leadership is also discussed....