Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11144/5249
Title: The European Union’s recovery and resilience fund, in the context of the European integration project and its future prospects
Authors: Guerra, Filipe
Keywords: European Union
Resilience and Recovery Fund
Integration
Crisis
COVID-19
Issue Date: Nov-2021
Publisher: OBSERVARE. Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa
Citation: Guerra, Filipe (2021). The European Union’s recovery and resilience fund, in the context of the European integration project and its future prospects. Janus.net, e-journal of international relations. Vol12, Nº. 2, November 2021-April 2022. Consulted [online] on the date of the last visit, https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.12.2.10
Abstract: Throughout its history, the process of European integration has been shaped by successive stages of transfer of competences and powers from the Member States to the European Union and its institutions. At the same time, and with progressively shorter latency periods, several moments of crisis in the integration process were recorded. Of these crises, the financial crisis that began in 2008 was of particular importance, demonstrating the difficulties in reaching consensus and the fragmentation of interests within the European integration process. This article aims to make a historical revisitation of several crisis moments in the European integration process, with special attention to the past sovereign debt and Eurozone crises. From this exposition, an argument is made about the susceptibility of fragmentation of interests within the European Union, what are the causes and consequences of this fragmentation and how this was reproduced throughout 2020 in the construction of the Recovery and Resilience Fund, launched by the European Union in response to the crisis triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic. Additionally, a diverse set of perspectives on the Resilience and Recovery Fund and its relevance in the framework of the continuity of the European integration process is presented. Finally, we conclude that the European integration process is once again marked by the strengthening of its political agenda and by recent signs of adaptation of the European Union institutions to the management of constant crisis cycles, allowing the integration process to continue.
Peer Reviewed: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11144/5249
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.12.2.10
ISSN: 1647-7251
Appears in Collections:OBSERVARE - JANUS.NET e-journal of International Relations. Vol.12, n.2 (November 2021 - April 2022)

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