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Subject: European Union Basics (FAQ), Part8/8
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Summary: This file is part of an eight-part posting containing basic
information about the European Union and other related or unrelated
European political organisations. It is hoped to serve both as background
information for those wishing to discuss European politics on the
talk.politics.european-union newsgroup, and as a general reference for
anyone concerned with politics in Europe.
Originator:
[email protected]
Date: 22 May 2006 04:35:56 GMT
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+ NB READERS OF THIS TEXT VERSION:
+ The original and most recent version of this file is always available
+ on the world-wide web. If you have Web access, please consider viewing
+ it there at the URL mentioned above.
EU Basics FAQ: About this FAQ list
[aboutEU]
Where to get the most recent version of this file
ORIGINAL HYPERTEXT VERSION
The original version of the European Union Basics (FAQ) list is written in
HTML and available on the web. If you have a WWW browser, you should
probably try and take a look at the latest version. The URL is
<
http://eubasics.allmansland.com/>[1]
TEXT ONLY (ISO-8859-1) VERSION
The text version is an unaltered HTML-to-ASCII translation from the CERN
Line-Mode Browser. Please appreciate that most accented characters will
probably be lost (and falsely translated) in the process of posting this
document to the different newsgroups, especially for those of you whose
sites haven't converted to 8-bit character sets yet. This may produce
unexpected results; however, omitting the accents altogether would produce
many errors in the names of people and parties quoted in this FAQ. The
latest version of the file is available at the following locations:
In newsgroups The text version is posted regularly to the newsgroups
talk.politics.european-union, eunet.politics,
alt.politics.ec, talk.answers, alt.answers,
news.answers. If you think other newsgroups should be
included in this posting, don't hesitate to suggest
this to the editors.
By anonymous FTP You can also retrieve the most recent version of these
files in text format via anonymous FTP to rtfm.mit.edu
[18.181.0.24], from the
/pub/usenet/news.answer
s/european-union/basics/[2]directory. Many mirror
sites are available.
By email (from the RTFM archives)
If you do not have anonymous ftp access, you can
access the MIT archives by mail server as well. Send
an E-mail message to <
[email protected][3]>
with the command
send usenet/news.answers/european-union/basics
in the body.
Author, contributors and sources
This list was edited by Roland Siebelink and Bart Schelfhout
<
[email protected][4]>. Please contact us by e-mail if you have any
questions, corrections, contributions or remarks about this list.
Several people contributed to the information contained in this list, thus
making it more complete, accurate and up-to-date. I would like to thank
specifically:
Malte Lewan <
[email protected]>
Alan Fraser Reekie <
[email protected] >
Nick Bernard <
[email protected]>
Jozef van Brabant <
[email protected] >
David Lauder <
[email protected] >
Jonathan Slater <
[email protected] >
Hiski Haapoja <
[email protected]>
Jorma Kyppo <
[email protected] >
Tamio Nakamura <
[email protected]>
Ole Villumsen <
[email protected] >
Carsten Quell <
[email protected] >
Hein Verkerk <
[email protected]>
Antero Aunesluoma <
[email protected]>
Joao Paulo Gomes <
[email protected] >
Marc Bonnaud <
[email protected] >
Achim Scheve <
[email protected] >
Jim Jackson <
[email protected] >
Ferdinand Spitzer <
[email protected] >
Willy Debacker <
[email protected]>
Alex E.H. Ng <
[email protected]>
Magnus Boivie <
[email protected]>
Very helpful was the contribution made by Frangois Thunus
<
[email protected]>
A major quality check of the whole list was performed by Richard Corbett
at <
[email protected]> from the European Parliament who sent me
many minor corrections as well as some major rewrites. Richard is an
authority in the field as he is one of the authors of the most commonly
used reference-book on the European Parliament (see below). His work has
been endorsed by the President of the European Parliament as «the
most comprehensive survey available on the structure, working methods and
powers of the European Parliamentµ, and by Neil Kinnock (European
Commissioner whose wife is a British MEP (PES) as «the most thumbed
book in the Kinnock householdµ.
And finally, Andrew Macmullen <
[email protected]>, who helped me
a lot in sending many minor corrections and additional information. He
also gave some additional information:
«Most of the infomation contained here could be found in grea
ter depth in basic text books on the EU. Three excellent up to date w
orks (and all available in paperback editions) are:
NUGENT (N.) 1994. The Government and Politics of the European Union.
London, Macmillan.
DINAN (D.) 1994. An Ever Closer Union? London, Macmillan.
ARCHER (C.) 1994. Organizing Europe: the Institutions of Integration.
Edward Arnold.
The leading academic journal carrying excellent material on all asp
ects of the EU is, in spite of its rather out-dated title: Journal of
Common Studies (Blackwells, Oxford). This includes an invaluable ann
ual supplement The European Union Annual Review of Activites.»
Some of the (paper) sources I used to find the answers to the questions in
this list are:
WESTLAKE (M.) 1994. A modern guide to the European Parliament. London,
Pinter, 302pp.
NOEL (E.) 1994. Working Together--The Institutions of the European
Community. Luxembourg, Office for Official Publications of the European
Communities, 66pp.
STEIN (M.) & VON WITZLEBEN (A.), eds., 1994. Europe Info. Directory of
important information sources in the European Union. Luxembourg, Office
for Official Publications of the European Communities, 161p.
CORBETT (R.), JACOBS (F.) & SHACKLETON (M.) 1995. The European
Parliament. Cartermill, 3rd ed.
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, 1994.Fact Sheets on the European Parliament and the
activities of the European Union. Brussels-Luxembourg, European
Parliament/Directorate-General for Research, 473pp.
The Treaties of Paris, Rome and Maastricht and the Single European Act.
Various brochures published by the European Commission and the European
Parliament.
___________________________________
Edited by Roland Siebelink & Bart Schelfhout
[5]corrections and suggestions welcome.
[Go to Table of Contents][6]
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