MTU Cork Library Catalogue

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Our Europe : the community and national development / Jacques Delors and Clisthene ; translated by Brian Pearce.

By: Delors, Jacques.
Contributor(s): Clisthène (Association).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London ; New York : Verso, 1992Description: x, 166 p. ; 24 cm.ISBN: 0860913805.Uniform titles: France par l'Europe Subject(s): European Economic Community -- France | France -- Economic policy -- 1981-1995DDC classification: 330.944
Contents:
An opening on to the world -- Interdependences -- Europe: the dream and the difficulty -- A new departure -- A community to be built -- The French in dire need of the state -- Modernizers of the republic -- Non-transferable models -- State and society: Towards a new synergy -- The challenge of economic performance -- The evolving enterprise -- We must not resign ourselves to unemployment -- A different way of living and working -- Competitiveness and solidarity -- Reconstructing employment -- Freeing society -- Our Europe.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 330.944 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00018555
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references (pages 161-163) and index.

An opening on to the world -- Interdependences -- Europe: the dream and the difficulty -- A new departure -- A community to be built -- The French in dire need of the state -- Modernizers of the republic -- Non-transferable models -- State and society: Towards a new synergy -- The challenge of economic performance -- The evolving enterprise -- We must not resign ourselves to unemployment -- A different way of living and working -- Competitiveness and solidarity -- Reconstructing employment -- Freeing society -- Our Europe.

Translation of: La France par l'Europe.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

If Delors's bold vision for a unified Europe takes effect, the 12 member nations of the European Community will soon have a common foreign policy with decisions taken by majority vote, plus a shorter work week, with workers choosing their own flexible schedules. As president of the European Commission--the policy-planning wing of the European Community--Delors is the prime architect of Western Europe's political and monetary union. In this concise, pithy manifesto, first published in 1988, Delors (writing with Clisthene, his team of researchers) advocates a mixed economy and a new social contract among trade unions, employers and the state. He also lashes France's elitist administrative and educational system and the panicky chauvinism of French right-wingers who resist globalization. Using Norway, Sweden and Austria as models, he outlines measures designed to reverse France's high unemployment rate. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Kirkus Book Review

An object lesson by European Commission President Delors, a longtime socialist, that ambitious European politicians are no more likely to say anything that means anything than are American ones. Delors, writing in conjunction with ``his research group Clisthène,'' notes that his purpose ``is to find a path for Europe which will be both practical and ambitious.'' It's clear that Delors is unhappy about the present situation: ``Every economic policy has been tried, and every one has failed in the last dozen or so years to have any real effect on the course of events.'' He notes that studies have shown that the abolition of all obstacles to exchange in economic cooperation would increase the GNP of Europe by 4.5 percent, lower prices by 6.1 percent, and create nearly two million new jobs. But the EEC, Delors laments, has so far been ``unable to define a common destiny.'' The author is interesting on France's ``haunting sense of decline,'' which has led, in his view, to the rise of demagogues like Jean-Marie Le Pen. The problem arises when Delors tries to tell what he would do about that decline. He favors, for example, a shorter workday, but he doesn't want to see this lead to any lowering of industrial standards. He's against unemployment and in favor of competitiveness, but doesn't offer a very clear idea as to how the one will be diminished or the other increased. He boldly stands for ``strengthening the ties between Europeans''; he believes that ``women's activity should continue to progress''; and he wishes to ``let everything be put back in its rightful place.'' And to get the best out of all these new experiences, ``many meetings will be needed....'' Even the brightest socialist politician would have trouble trying to navigate the shoals of the decline of socialism. It's not surprising, then, that Delors deals with the problem by saying almost nothing.

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