Iceland and European Integration: On the Edge

Front Cover
Baldur Thorhallsson
Routledge, 2004 M03 1 - 232 pages
Why has Iceland not sought membership of the European Union?

This unique volume uses the case study of Iceland - the only Nordic state to have never applied for EU membership - to explore the complex attitudes of small states to European intergration and provide a new theoretical approach for understanding such relationships.

The contributors explain why the Icelandic political elite has been relunctant to participate in European integration. In this context, they analyse the influence that Iceland's special relationship with the US and the fisheries sector have had on their dealings with the EU. Also considered are 'new' variables, such as national administrative characteristics and particular features of the domestic arena of the political elite, as well as the elite's perception of international relations and its political discourse concerning independence and sovereignty.

Iceland and European Integration will appeal to all those interested in European integration and the international relations of small states
 

Contents

List of figures
List of abbreviations
foundation of the republic to 1972
membership of the
membership
BALDUR THORHALLSSON
Life is first and foremost saltfish
The special relationship between Iceland and the United States
Icelandic
The Eurosceptical political elite
a weak administration as a determinant
Towards a new theoretical approach
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Baldur Thorhallson is Associate Professor of Political Science, and Chairman of the Institute of International Affairs and the Centre for Small State Studies, at the University of Iceland

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