Aurelié Andry: Social Europe, the Road not taken. (2024)

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Social Democracy in Europe

2004 •

Pascal Delwit

Socialist and Social Democratic parties leave few political observers and citizens indifferent. For several years, a certain number of actors on the political scene have presented it as a political family in crisis, lacking in imagination and dynamism, incapable of renewal and doomed to fade into insignificance. Others, on the contrary, describe it as a grouping with a promising, even brilliant future. This book does not set out to confirm either of those two visions. Its aim is to analyse in-depth the transformations which are affecting, at the current time, the different aspects of Social Democracy: new organisational models, changes in political and electoral performance, changing relations with the trade unions and civil society associations, reactions to the emergence of new political rivais and new values, new ideological trends and political programmes, etc. For the first time, the analysis does not concern exclusively Western Europe, but also deals with the Social Democratic parties of the consolidated democracies and the organisations that claim to be part of democratic socialism in Central and Eastern Europe, and highlights the specific characteristics and points in common. At the dawn of the 21st century, it is therefore the challenges and the different responses to those challenges that are analysed by several of the leading European specialists in Social Democratic parties in Europe. "

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Social Democracy Caught in the European Trap

2015 •

Fabien Escalona, Vieira Mathieu

Political science literature has extensively described social democracy’s ‘two metamorphoses’. First there was the establishment of social democratic parties as major government parties in the ‘Keynesian State’ period and then their ‘de-social-democratisation’ after the 1970s, while the renovation promoted by Tony Blair and Gerhard Schröder was associated with electoral success at the end of the 1990s. The propulsive power of this new social democratic identity was then rapidly exhausted. Until the last days before the 2014 European elections, opinion polls carried out in EU member countries allowed the social democrats to hope that they could pass the 200-seat threshold in the 751-seat European Parliament (EP) and make good the setback they had suffered five years earlier. Indeed, in 2009 only a quarter of the MEPs belonged to the EP’s S&D group, which was at an historically low level. We will first show that social democracy managed to stabilise its weight in the EP only while continuing to decline in percentage of votes. This result should be seen in the context of the historic trajectory of a political family of parties that we extensively studied in The Palgrave Handbook of Social Democracy.2We will next address the present state of this family of parties in the middle of capitalism’s structural crisis and the dilemmas it faces in the very peculiar regime of the European Union. The social democrats, because of their own history, have tied themselves up in a bundle of constraints — which are creating their present difficulties. For this reason, they will probably not be of much help in putting an end to the austerity that is devastating the European continent. This will be the last point covered by this article.

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in Delwit P., Kulahci E., Van de Waelle C. (ed.), The Europarties, Organisation and Influence. Electronic version, Brussels: Editions de l’Université de Bruxelles, 2004: 113-134.

The Party of European Socialists: The Difficult “Construction” of a European Player (2004)pdf.pdf

Gerassimos Moschonas

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The European Turn and "Social Europe". Northern European Social Democracy 1950-1985

Kristian Steinnes

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Review Essay: Nothing but Doom and Gloom in the House of Social Democracy? An Upbeat Assessment of European Social Democracy's Future

2004 •

Stefan Berger

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Renewal (London)

Renovating European Social Democracy

2007 •

Ben Clift

The ‘end’ of social democracy has been pronounced repeatedly, with varying degrees of conviction in recent decades (Dahrendorf 1990; Giddens 1994; Gray 1996, 1998). Meanwhile, in 2007, both the French and Italian left have entered (yet another) phase of introspection, ideological redefinition and aggiornamiento. In both cases, the path of social democratisation is seen (by at least one major faction) as virtually synonymous with modernity and ‘renewal’. This attests to the capacity for ideological innovation, and renovation, within social democracy. How could so many erudite scholars pronouncing the death of social democracy so assertively over the last two decades ago have been so mistaken? The answer lies in how social democracy is conceived, and some hidden assumptions within these commentaries on the fortunes of the left in the late twentieth and early 21st Century. There is a tendency to identify social democracy firstly with a particular set of institutional ‘means’ (such as corporatism or nationalisation) and secondly with the policy paradigms within which those means were couched (such as ‘planning’ or ‘Keynesianism’). The fortunes of social democracy are evaluated in terms of particular means through which, across the twentieth century in different national contexts, the political aspirations of social democracy have been channelled. This leads to detailed analysis of particular national configurations of institutions, policies and paradigms. These means-oriented approaches have generated much invaluable insight into the nature of social democracy and its historical, political and programmatic development. However, the lessons to draw from this means based analysis of social democracy are not those which first leap off the page.

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Introduction, in European Social Democracy During the Global Economic Crisis: Renovation or Resignation ?

2014 •

Vieira Mathieu, Jean-Michel De Waele

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Renewal, Vol. 21 No.2/3 (2012).

'A Europe of progress and prosperity: social democracy setting off towards the European elections',

2012 •

Ania Skrzypek

This article starts from the hypothesis that the European elections are set to evolve from second order elections towards fi rst order ones: the economic crisis has the potential to push European elections up the agenda in individual European nations, while political changes (inaugurated, particularly, by the Lisbon Treaty) may change the relationship between national and European elections. Social democratic parties should, therefore, alter their approach to the European elections. This article is a contribution to debates about the best response to these changing irc*mstances, describing three building blocks that could serve as foundations for a new sort of European programme. These pillars are: modernising European progressive values; conceptualising the Next European Social Deal; and accelerating expectations for European democracy. The analyses and subsequent proposals set out in this text derive in the main from studies that have been and are currently being conducted within the Next Left Research Programme undertaken by the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS).

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Bernhard Wessels

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Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe - HAL - Inria

Social Democracy in Europe 4.0

2017 •

Günther Schmid

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Aurelié Andry: Social Europe, the Road not taken. (2024)
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