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PROJECT

EU IDEA

Differentiation has become the new normal in the European Union (EU) and one of the most crucial matters in defining its future. A certain degree of differentiation has always been part of the European integration project since its early days. The Eurozone and the Schengen area have further consolidated this trend into long-term projects of differentiated integration among EU member states.

A number of unprecedented internal and external challenges to the EU, however, including the financial and economic crisis, the migration phenomenon, renewed geopolitical tensions and Brexit, have reinforced today the belief that more flexibility is needed within the complex EU machinery. A Permanent Structured Cooperation, for example, has been launched in the field of defence, enabling groups of willing and able Member States to join forces through new, flexible arrangements. Differentiation could offer a way forward also in many other key policy fields within the Union, where uniformity is undesirable or unattainable, as well as in the design of EU external action within an increasingly unstable global environment, offering manifold models of cooperation between the EU and candidate countries, potential accession countries and associated third countries.

EU IDEA’s key goal is to address whether, how much and what form of differentiation is not only compatible with but is also conducive to a more effective, cohesive and democratic EU. The basic claim of the project is that differentiation is not only necessary to address current challenges more effectively, by making the Union more resilient and responsive to citizens. Differentiation is also desirable as long as such flexibility is compatible with the core principles of the EU’s constitutionalism and identity, sustainable in terms of governance, and acceptable to EU citizens, Member States and affected third partners.


Publications

Differentiated integration / PUBLICATION
Schengen under Pressure: Differentiation or Disintegration?
By Marie De Somer , Funda Tekin , Vittoria Meissner - 28/09/2020
Foreign policy / PUBLICATION
Differentiated Cooperation in European Foreign Policy: The Challenge of Coherence
By Giovanni Grevi , Marco Zeiss , Pol Morillas , Eduard Soler i Lecha - 31/08/2020
Brexit / COMMENTARY
This deal or no deal
By Fabian Zuleeg - 17/10/2019
Brexit / DISCUSSION PAPER
Brexit: How was it for you?
By Andrew Duff - 17/09/2019
Brexit / COMMENTARY
No-deal Brexit may be the only way out for Boris Johnson
By Larissa Brunner - 24/07/2019
Brexit / BOOK
Ensuring a post-Brexit level playing field
By Fabian Zuleeg , David Baldock , Pablo Ibáñez Colomo , Emily Lydgate , Marley Morris , Martin Nesbit , Jacques Pelkmans , Vincent Verouden , Larissa Brunner - 20/05/2019

team

Chief Executive and Chief Economist 
Expertise:
Europe’s political economy, Future of Europe, EU relationship with third countries, transnational think tank cooperation
Deputy Chief Executive & Director of Studies
Expertise:
Institutional reform, poly-crisis, differentiated integration, enlargement, reform of economic governance
Senior Associate Fellow

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