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The Routledge Handbook of Euroscepticism
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Table of Contents

Part I Euroscepticism: Theory and Conceptualisation

1. Defining Euroscepticism: From a Broad Concept to a Field of Study

2. Contemporary Research on Euroscepticism: The State of the Art

3. Theory, Concepts and Research Design in the Study of Euroscepticism

4. Euroscepticism as Ideology

5. Euroscepticism: Stand-alone Phenomenon or Embedded within a Broader Cleavage?

Part II Eurosceptic Parties and Domestic Party Systems

6. Euroscepticism and Political Parties: Theory and Practice

7. ‘Euromondialisme’ and the Growth of the Radical Right

8. Opposing Europe, Opposing Austerity: Radical Left Parties and the Eurosceptic Debate

9. The UK Independence Party and other Primarily Eurosceptic Parties

10. The Dynamic of Euroscepticism in Germany

11. Party-based Euroscepticism in the Nordic Region: Ever More ‘Reluctant Europeans’?

12. Eurosceptic Parties in the Central and Eastern European Countries: A Comparative Case Study of Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria

13. Changing the Rules, Changing the Winners? The Various Effects of European Election Rules on Party Oppositions to the EU in France

14. Losing Loyalty: The Rise of Polity Euroscepticism in Southern Europe

Part III Public Opinion, Referendums and Citizens’ Perceptions of the European Union

15. Soft Sceptics and Hard Rejectionists: Identifying Two Types of Eurosceptic Voters

16. Young People and the EU at Times of Crisis

17. Eurosceptic Youth: Interest, Trust and Ideology

18. The Pragmatic Euroscepticism of Scandinavia

19. Derailing European Integration? Euroscepticism and the Politics of EU Referendums

20. EU Referendums in the ‘New’ Member States: Politicisation after a Decade of Support?

21. Referendums and European Integration: The Case of the United Kingdom

22. When ‘No’ means ‘Yes’: A Comparative Study of Referendums in Denmark and Ireland

Part IV Non-state Actors: Civil Society and the Media

23. Euroscepticism as EU Polity Contestation

24. Euroscepticism and the Crisis: ‘Critical Europeanism’ and Anti-austerity Social Movements

25. Euroscepticism and Big Business

26. Euroscepticism and Trade Unionism: The Crisis of ‘Social Europe’

27. Mirroring or Setting the Political Agenda? The Role of the Media in the Eurosceptic Debate

28. Varieties of Opposition to the EU in the Low Countries: A Comparison of the Dutch and Flemish Press

Part V Transnational and Pan-European Euroscepticism

29. Euroscepticism in the EU Institutions: A Persistent and Embedded Phenomenon

30. Transnational and Pan-European Euroscepticism: The Case of the European Conservatives and Reformists

31. Eurosceptic Members of the European Parliament: Foxes in the Henhouse?

32. The Far Right and the 2014 European Elections: Consequences for the Eurosceptic Debate

Part VI Crises: Euroscepticism, Brexit and the Future of European Integration

33. The Impact of the Economic Crisis on Euroscepticism

34. Voting to Leave: Economic Insecurity and the Brexit Vote

35. How the Referendum was Lost: An Analysis of the UK Referendum Campaign on EU Membership

36. Conclusion: Euroscepticism and European (dis)integration in the Age of Brexit

About the Author

Benjamin Leruth is an Assistant Professor in Politics and Public Administration at the Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis (IGPA), University of Canberra, Australia. His research focuses on Euroscepticism, differentiated integration in the European Union and public attitudes to political institutions. His publications include a Journal of European Public Policy special issue on differentiated integration (2015), a co-edited book entitled Euroscepticism as a Transnational and Pan-European Phenomenon (Routledge, 2017) and After Austerity (2017).

Nicholas Startin is Head of Department for Politics, Languages and International Studies (PoLIS) at the University of Bath, UK. His research focuses on Euroscepticism and the far right in contemporary Europe. He co-founded the UACES research network on Euroscepticism and has in recent years been the co-editor for two prominent, special issues on the topic in the Journal of Common Market Studies (2013) and the International Political Science Review (2015). He recently co-edited Euroscepticism as a Transnational and Pan-European Phenomenon (Routledge, 2017).

Simon Usherwood is a Reader in Politics at the University of Surrey, UK. His research focuses on Euroscepticism which has led him to co-found and organise an extensive network of colleagues across Europe, as well as working with practitioners in the EU, national government and other civil society groups. As well as numerous publications in this field, he is also very active on matters relating to the UK–EU relationship.

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