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- Title
Motives for the foundation of the ECSC.
- Authors
BERGER, Michael
- Abstract
Th e establishment of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) can be considered as a milestone for the development of European integration. It is the fi rst concrete achievement of several centuries of reflection on European construction, the gradual evolvement from a coal and steel pooling into the Union in which we live today. Th e process of subordinating the nation-state order by establishing supranational Community structures was a complex development, provoking national interests, reciprocal obstacles and diff erent methodological approaches to the subject. A fundamental issue was the fact that the coal industry problem could not be reduced to a mere question of adequate supply of raw materials in times of scarcity of coal; it was rather composed of a whole range of closely interconnected problem areas within diff erent political and economic levels. Th e focus was thus, additionally set on growth, competition issues as well as socio-political aspects coupled with security policy dimensions which appeared to slow down the whole process. Th e present paper tries to outline the background and motivation of a European alliance within a supranational agency, the initiatives and methods that were used as well as the institutions that were needed in order to eventually transfer power to a common High Authority. Th e diff erent driving forces shall be examined as well as the motivation of the main actors behind the scenes who were, in this particular case, of prominent importance. Th e question why Britain did not join the treaty of the six shall be examined and put in the right context. Th e author fi nds it especially crucial at present to underline how the fi rst steps towards a European cooperation took place, in particular at a time where the integrity of the Union is being questioned. Th e motives for such a step will be considered in order on examine whether the decisions taken were based on economic aspects, political aspects or rather on purely external factors. Th is work is based around two sections and its scope is to illustrate the conceptual approach of the initial six ECSC countries to pool their resources and to go ahead with the unification project. Th e fi rst section of the paper deals with the chronological order and its developments of an idea of a unified Europe which eventually became political reality. It is divided in three subsections: the period before and aft er WW II, the announcement of the Schuman Declaration and the negotiation process at the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) in Paris. It will be argued that France was the main initiator in the process of this early European integration, albeit not from the very beginning, and this section will analyze the motives of France in bringing into existence the ECSC. Th e second section is devoted to the reactions of the other countries that were invited to join the Community and their reasons behind the decision to become signatory members of the Treaty.
- Subjects
EUROPEAN Coal &; Steel Community; ECONOMIC development; MOTIVES (Mathematics); EUROPEAN Construction Institute; SUPRANATIONALISM; RAW materials; COAL industry
- Publication
Poznan University of Economics Review, 2013, Vol 13, Issue 3, p55
- ISSN
1643-5877
- Publication type
Article