Democracy and Communication

The EU faces a conundrum: how to make itself respected and appreciated by citizens at a time when they are ever more wary of politicians, elites and “the establishment”.

Three years on from the French and Dutch rejections of the EU constitution, in June 2008 it was the turn of the Irish to pour cold water on the dreams of the Brussels institutions in voting down the Lisbon Treaty. The EU must now walk the tightrope of seeking to salvage its decade-old institutional reform process whilst not being seen to trample on the will of the Irish people. That will not be an easy balance to strike. How it handles this latest existential crisis will affect its public perception and legitimacy at a crucial time, with European Parliamentary elections and the renewal of the European Commission both looming in 2009.

Below are some recent events hosted by The Centre in its Democracy and Communication Strand:

Growing Apart

America and Europe in the 21st Century

31 Jan 2008

Between Transparency and Regulation

Lobbying in the EU Policy Process

23 Jan 2008

State of the EU

21 Jan 2008

Poland's Choice, Europe's Concern

A post-election briefing

23 Oct 2007

Communicating Europe: why so controversial?

The case of the European Parliament's webTV channel

3 Jul 2007

The next 50 years

What sort of Europe do we want?

22 Mar 2007

The Future of Europe - Renewing the Project

Roundtable and pamphlet launch

12 Dec 2006

‘Europe in the World: Political Choices for Security and Prosperity'

Pamphlet launch discussion and reception

11 Dec 2006