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440 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. vii (1978)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0440 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

The need for periodic reassessment of major institutions in an era of
swift change explains this collection on the Western European Community
after twenty years of operation. It has developed less vibrantly than its
framers had hoped, but it has survived several momentous crises, and even
grown in scope, size, and influence. The experiment of economic coopera-
tion and integration has resulted in a vast common market of workers,
capital and goods-a flourishing concern. Admittedly, issues and sources
of conflict from the first decade continue, and new problems arise, obstruct-
ing the road toward that 'ever closer union' that the Treaties of Rome
forecasted.
The attempts to illuminate the past, clarify the present, and project into
the future contained in this issue are the products of specialists from
numerous disciplines and backgrounds. They disagree openly and fre-
quently, but are in accord that the results of research into the nature and
mechanisms of this regional integration venture require greater exposure
and discussion in the United States. Hopefully, this series of papers
will broaden knowledge and understanding about the Community
which is, with all its imperfections, a great and growing weight
and authority in global politics and the new world economy.
This issue focuses on institution building and policymaking, reviewing
many of the causes for the Community's uneven record and emphasizing
the new issues of the seventies. Various obstacles have impeded progress
toward harmonization, coordination, and integration in the fields of energy,
transfer of technology, monetary, and foreign policies. Accomplishments
have been limited and real Community linkage has been based on sound
structural foundations and economic stability-growth. For certain specific
goals, the member-states are cooperative and have demonstrated a capacity
to expand. But ambitions are in fact more modest and priorities more
carefully and realistically set. Often, the Nine find that they must fight
the tendency merely to retain past gains and achievements.
Those obstacles that will inevitably deter advances are the economic
ills-inflation, unemployment, the balance of payments deficits, shortage
of energy, the appeal of protectionism, and the widening gap of economic
divergencies among the partners. But the prevailing crises are not all
economic in character. Structural failings in the Community remain. In-
stitutional evolution must be geared and adapted to the newer problems,
such as creating greater connections to the grass roots. The authors point
out the achieved strategy areas of joint policy and the arena where
there are encouraging signs of progress, but they also delineate the
failures of the uneven, spotty, almost woeful institutional apparatus.
With all its imperfections, the Community is alive, basically well,
outward-looking in most cases, certainly open minded and liberal, and a
greater weight in the globe today. Yet it remains too bureaucratic, is too
frequently a reflection of strong nationalistic instincts, and lacks direct
democratic accountability. It is a growing concern that at times flourishes,
vii

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