Europeanism


Europeanism is a term that encapsulates the norms and values that Europeans have in common, and which transcend national or state identity. In addition to helping promote the European integration, this doctrine also provides the basis for analyses that characterise European politics, economics, and society as reflecting a shared identity. Opponents to the idea stress that there are various differences among European groups and that the factors seen as characteristic of this shared culture do not necessarily follow its premise.

Habermas and Derrida (2005)

The philosophers Jürgen Habermas and Jacques Derrida wrote an article for the newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in which they claimed the birth of a 'European public sphere'.
They argued that new values and habits had given contemporary Europe 'its own face', and saw an opportunity for the construction of a 'core Europe' that might be a counterweight to the United States.
Attempting to explain what Europe represented, the two philosophers listed six facets of what they described as a common European 'political mentality':
However it could be argued that at least some of these values do not at all apply in eastern Europe.

McCormick (2010)

Political scientist John McCormick expands on these ideas, and identifies the following as core attributes of Europeanism: