Paris, 8 December 2017 – Academy: Political and Social Europe
The second session of the Académie Notre Europe takes place on the 8th of December, at the Regional Council of Ile-de-France. Participants will have the opportunity to debate on the political and social aspects of the European Union.
On the 29th of March, 2017, nine months after the referendum for which 51,9% of the British population voted to leave the EU, the United Kingdom triggered the article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU). From this date, the UK has now two years to negotiate with the 27 remaining Member States on terms and conditions of its leave, which still remains an official member of the EU. Since September 2017, the Commission has set a “Article 50 Task Force”, led by its chief negotiator Michel Barnier and in charge to lead negociations with the UK on behalf of the EU. Jonathan Faull, former Director-General of the “Task Force for Strategic Issues related to the UK Referendum” of the European Commission, will shed the light on the negotiating process and introduce its “hot” issues.
- 09:00 – European “Café culture”
- 09:45 – Introduction by Pierre Lequiller, regional adviser and president of the Ile-de-France Europe association
- 10:00 – Brexit negotiation
Discussion between Elvire Fabry, senior research fellow at the Jacques Delors Institute, and Imola Streho, director of the Notre Europe Academy - 11:00 – Brexit
Séminar by Jonathan Faull, former Director-General of the European Commission
In April 1989, a “Committee for the Study of the European and Monetary Union”, chaired by the European Commission president, Jacques Delors, and whose 12 Central Bank governors of the European Commuity were members, issued a report which laid the foundations of the current EMU. Almost thirty years later, while the Single Market and the Monetary Union are functioning, the Economic Union is still incomplete and social policies supposed to reinforce its architecture are not meeting initial expectations. That is why the afternoon of this session will be dedicated to the study of the economic and social Europe, two crucial components of the European integration. Their origins, developments and institutional shortcomings will be introduced by Sofia Fernandes et Eulalia Rubio, senior research fellows at the Jacques Delors Institute. Maria João Rodrigues, MEP and president of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS) will, thereafter, introduce the main current issues on these topics.
- 13:30 – Pedagogical workshop: discussing seminars
Led by Eulalia Rubio, senior research fellow at the Jacques Delors Institute, and Imola Streho, director of the Notre Europe Academy - 14:30 – Introduction to the Economic and Social Europe
Eulalia Rubio and Sofia Fernandes, senior research fellows at the Jacques Delors Institute - 15:30 – The Economic and Social Europe
Seminar by Maria João Rodrigues, vice-president of the vice-présidente Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats at the European parliament and president of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS) - 17:00 – Joint programme workshop and wrap-up session
On the 29th of March, 2017, nine months after the referendum for which 51,9% of the British population voted to leave the EU, the United Kingdom triggered the article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU). From this date, the UK has now two years to negotiate with the 27 remaining Member States on terms and conditions of its leave, which still remains an official member of the EU. Since September 2017, the Commission has set a “Article 50 Task Force”, led by its chief negotiator Michel Barnier and in charge to lead negociations with the UK on behalf of the EU. Jonathan Faull, former Director-General of the “Task Force for Strategic Issues related to the UK Referendum” of the European Commission, will shed the light on the negotiating process and introduce its “hot” issues.
- 09:00 – European “Café culture”
- 09:45 – Introduction by Pierre Lequiller, regional adviser and president of the Ile-de-France Europe association
- 10:00 – Brexit negotiation
Discussion between Elvire Fabry, senior research fellow at the Jacques Delors Institute, and Imola Streho, director of the Notre Europe Academy - 11:00 – Brexit
Séminar by Jonathan Faull, former Director-General of the European Commission
In April 1989, a “Committee for the Study of the European and Monetary Union”, chaired by the European Commission president, Jacques Delors, and whose 12 Central Bank governors of the European Commuity were members, issued a report which laid the foundations of the current EMU. Almost thirty years later, while the Single Market and the Monetary Union are functioning, the Economic Union is still incomplete and social policies supposed to reinforce its architecture are not meeting initial expectations. That is why the afternoon of this session will be dedicated to the study of the economic and social Europe, two crucial components of the European integration. Their origins, developments and institutional shortcomings will be introduced by Sofia Fernandes et Eulalia Rubio, senior research fellows at the Jacques Delors Institute. Maria João Rodrigues, MEP and president of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS) will, thereafter, introduce the main current issues on these topics.
- 13:30 – Pedagogical workshop: discussing seminars
Led by Eulalia Rubio, senior research fellow at the Jacques Delors Institute, and Imola Streho, director of the Notre Europe Academy - 14:30 – Introduction to the Economic and Social Europe
Eulalia Rubio and Sofia Fernandes, senior research fellows at the Jacques Delors Institute - 15:30 – The Economic and Social Europe
Seminar by Maria João Rodrigues, vice-president of the vice-présidente Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats at the European parliament and president of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS) - 17:00 – Joint programme workshop and wrap-up session
Paris
SUR LE MÊME THÈME
ON THE SAME THEME
PUBLICATIONS
The true power of the EU is in transforming countries and lives
After Brexit, euro-denominated derivatives transactions should leave the City
The Euro as seen by citizens who do not yet have it
Is Scotland really on the road to independence ?
Using the “Barnier Method”
to deal with China
L’Europe, une construction toujours en devenir
Brexit: Breaking the laws of gravity?
Framing the state aid debate for the post-covid era the Brexit challenge
The new political economy of Brexit
Is Brexit a game changer for EU external differentiated integration?
Brexit and External Differentiation in Single Market Access
Brexit : the worst is yet to come!
Brexit has not won over european opinions, quite the contrary
Will Brexit turn the European Parliament upside-down ?
Trade war :
bad timing for Brexit ‘take back control’
Brexiteers success, Brexit failures
‘No deal’ Brexit and the EU budget:
beware the risk for EU unity
Brexit: the Knowns Amongst the Unknowns. For the UK, the EU and Third Countries, notably South Korea
Check Against Delivery: “Brexit, Ireland and europe at 27”
The reform of the EMU: what social dimension?
Le troisième acte de l’histoire européenne
Should there be another Brexit-referendum? Risks and opportunities
Between amputation and strengthening: what Brexit?
What impact would a No Deal Brexit have on European Parliament elections?
A Guide to Brexit and Data Flows
Es ist Zeit
Economic and Monetary Union: past and present
Brexit: potential scenarios amid turbulent waters
The future of the Eurozone: cross-perspective from France and Germany
Who Will Cope with the Post-Brexit Resentment?
No Escape from Politics: four tests for a successful fiscal instrument in the Euro area
Transition: the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Brexit Galaxy
Looking for the silver bullet – A guide to the ESM debate
Ireland on the rocky road to Brexit
Understanding the “Brexit Divorce Bill”
The possible impact of Brexit on the EU budget and CAP funding
Juncker’s Last Hurrah
Brexit and the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
Enrico Letta about the main issues of the June 2017 EU Council
French and Europeans: Stronger Together!
Future of the Capital Markets Union after Brexit
Brexit: Negotiation Phases and Scenarios of a Drama in Three Acts
Brexit and the EU budget: threat or opportunity?
EU external action and Brexit: relaunch and reconnect
For an ambitious Europe
The revival of the EU at 27
France’s European vision
The Political Future of the European Union
The Political Future of the European Union by Manuel Valls
The Political Future of the European Union by Jean-Claude Juncker
Brexit: between British Europhobia and continental Euroscepticisms
Repair and Prepare: Growth and the Euro after Brexit
Stronger together – even at 27!
Joschka Fischer – “Europe after the British referendum”
EU Economic Policy Coordination
“Brexit”: a British drama, a challenge for the EU
Automatic stabilisers for the euro area: what is on the table?
Managing a successful UK-EU divorce, arousing the desire for Union
The EU-UK Agreement: much ado about (almost) nothing?
Germany and the stability of the EMU
“Shared sovereignty for monitoring borders already shared”
What would a European finance minister do? A proposal
After the Greek psychodrama, what improvements for the EMU?
After the Greek deal: why it is urgent to complete EMU
The EU and Greece: exiting “IMF – Europe” rather than the Euro
On asylum and the euro: displaying solidarity is in our own interest
Improving EMU: Our recommendations for the debate on the five presidents report
Cameron: taking a gamble on Europe
Repair and prepare: Strengthening Europe’s economies after the crisis
What political and institutional evolutions for the EU and the EMU?
Promoting structural reforms in the euro area: what for and how?
20 years “core Europe”
Reforming Europe’s governance
Adjustment programmes in the euro area: mission accomplished?
25 years after the Delors Report: what lessons for economic and monetary union?
The “stupidity pact” is not stable
The unhappy state of the Union
Completing the Economic and Monetary Union
European elections: full steam ahead!
Which financial instrument to facilitate structural reforms in the euro area?
Deepening the EMU: How to maintain and develop the European social model?
Endowing the EMU with a Social Dimension
Towards a Euro Union
An Inter-Parliamentary Conference for the EMU
Blueprint for a Cyclical Shock Insurance in the euro area
A social dimension for the EMU: why and how?
The way out of the Cyprus economic crisis
Beyond the Troika: which divides and faces for the EU?
Eurozone and democracy(ies) : a misleading debate
The Baltic states in the EU: yesterday, today and tomorrow
Rethinking the EMU and making Greater Europe positive again
Fear not, we will get there!
Europe between renewal and decline
Leading Europe from the front
Rebuilding Greater Europe
The parliaments of the EU and the governance of the EMU
European budget 2014-2020: seven years of bad luck?
What political union for Europe?
Making one size fit all. Designing a cyclical adjustment insurance fund for the eurozone
Britain and Europe: Anatomy of a speech
Reflections on Political Union
What balance between austerity and growth in the euro zone?
Reform proposals for the euro zone
A new path for growth and solidarity
The euro zone, core of a political union
“Democracy in Europe”
Eurozone budget: 3 functions, 3 instruments
The interim report on the EMU is encouraging
Which Institutions for the Euro Area?
EMU: long-term matters are urgent matters
Fire-fighters, Policemen and Architects for European Integration
Setting up and governing the euro
Completing the Euro: A road map towards fiscal union in Europe
Federal Leap or Political Unions?
European guarantees to get out of the crisis?
For a revival of Europe
Pascal Lamy’ speech “Europe in the Global Economy”
The politics of the EMU governance
Solidarity within the Eurozone: how much, what for, for how long?
The Future of Europe in the New Global Economy



























































































































