Conceptions of "Nordic Democracy" and European Integration

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Conceptions of "Nordic Democracy" and European Integration. / Jakobsen, Uffe.

2008. Paper presented at The XV. NOPSA Conference, Tromsø, Norway.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jakobsen, U 2008, 'Conceptions of "Nordic Democracy" and European Integration', Paper presented at The XV. NOPSA Conference, Tromsø, Norway, 06/08/2008 - 09/08/2008.

APA

Jakobsen, U. (2008). Conceptions of "Nordic Democracy" and European Integration. Paper presented at The XV. NOPSA Conference, Tromsø, Norway.

Vancouver

Jakobsen U. Conceptions of "Nordic Democracy" and European Integration. 2008. Paper presented at The XV. NOPSA Conference, Tromsø, Norway.

Author

Jakobsen, Uffe. / Conceptions of "Nordic Democracy" and European Integration. Paper presented at The XV. NOPSA Conference, Tromsø, Norway.15 p.

Bibtex

@conference{231f7e80b0fb11debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "Conceptions of {"}Nordic Democracy{"} and European Integration",
abstract = "Reluctance towards European integration in the Nordic countries is doubtlessly more connected to ideas on democracy than elsewhere. This goes not only for the (empirical) practicability of democracy but also for the (normative) desirability of democracy in the EU. After the Second World War, when the process of contemporary European integration was approaching, and the concept of democracy at the same time was heavily contested in public debates and among academics, two conceptions of democracy were struggling: On one hand, democracy was recognized as a European value developing in the form of {\textquoteleft}tripartition of power' from the Age of the Enlightenment and spreading from the European centre to the Nordic periphery, as it were. On the other hand, democracy was reconsidered as a universal value in the form of {\textquoteleft}dialogue' (or deliberation) as a reaction to the Nazi compromising of democracy in the 1930s and reborn after the Second World War as genuine democracy. However, a third narrative developed in which democracy was seen as having its roots in the Nordic countries dating back to the Viking Age or earlier. In the period from the 1940s to the 1980s, a number of Nordic anthologies contained articles on this idea of a {"}Nordic democracy{"}. The paper maps the conceptual history of {"}Nordic democracy{"} and illustrates the ways in which the different narratives interfere with the idea of European integration in the Nordic countries.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Begrebshistorie, Narrativer, Demokrati, Demokratibegrebet, Demokratisering, EU, Den Europ{\ae}iske Union, Europ{\ae}isk politik, Europ{\ae}isk integration, Domstolspr{\o}velse af lovgivning, Conceptual history, History of concepts, Narratives, Democracy, Concepts of democracy, Democratization, EU, The European Union, European politics, European integration, Judicial review",
author = "Uffe Jakobsen",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 06-08-2008 Through 09-08-2008",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Conceptions of "Nordic Democracy" and European Integration

AU - Jakobsen, Uffe

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Reluctance towards European integration in the Nordic countries is doubtlessly more connected to ideas on democracy than elsewhere. This goes not only for the (empirical) practicability of democracy but also for the (normative) desirability of democracy in the EU. After the Second World War, when the process of contemporary European integration was approaching, and the concept of democracy at the same time was heavily contested in public debates and among academics, two conceptions of democracy were struggling: On one hand, democracy was recognized as a European value developing in the form of ‘tripartition of power' from the Age of the Enlightenment and spreading from the European centre to the Nordic periphery, as it were. On the other hand, democracy was reconsidered as a universal value in the form of ‘dialogue' (or deliberation) as a reaction to the Nazi compromising of democracy in the 1930s and reborn after the Second World War as genuine democracy. However, a third narrative developed in which democracy was seen as having its roots in the Nordic countries dating back to the Viking Age or earlier. In the period from the 1940s to the 1980s, a number of Nordic anthologies contained articles on this idea of a "Nordic democracy". The paper maps the conceptual history of "Nordic democracy" and illustrates the ways in which the different narratives interfere with the idea of European integration in the Nordic countries.

AB - Reluctance towards European integration in the Nordic countries is doubtlessly more connected to ideas on democracy than elsewhere. This goes not only for the (empirical) practicability of democracy but also for the (normative) desirability of democracy in the EU. After the Second World War, when the process of contemporary European integration was approaching, and the concept of democracy at the same time was heavily contested in public debates and among academics, two conceptions of democracy were struggling: On one hand, democracy was recognized as a European value developing in the form of ‘tripartition of power' from the Age of the Enlightenment and spreading from the European centre to the Nordic periphery, as it were. On the other hand, democracy was reconsidered as a universal value in the form of ‘dialogue' (or deliberation) as a reaction to the Nazi compromising of democracy in the 1930s and reborn after the Second World War as genuine democracy. However, a third narrative developed in which democracy was seen as having its roots in the Nordic countries dating back to the Viking Age or earlier. In the period from the 1940s to the 1980s, a number of Nordic anthologies contained articles on this idea of a "Nordic democracy". The paper maps the conceptual history of "Nordic democracy" and illustrates the ways in which the different narratives interfere with the idea of European integration in the Nordic countries.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Begrebshistorie

KW - Narrativer

KW - Demokrati

KW - Demokratibegrebet

KW - Demokratisering

KW - EU

KW - Den Europæiske Union

KW - Europæisk politik

KW - Europæisk integration

KW - Domstolsprøvelse af lovgivning

KW - Conceptual history, History of concepts

KW - Narratives

KW - Democracy

KW - Concepts of democracy

KW - Democratization

KW - EU

KW - The European Union

KW - European politics

KW - European integration

KW - Judicial review

M3 - Paper

Y2 - 6 August 2008 through 9 August 2008

ER -

ID: 14908882