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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: An Historical Overview
- 1 Making Sense of the EMU Negotiations
- 2 EMU, the Mitterrand Presidency, and French Political Tradition
- 3 The Political Problem of Reconciling Domestic and International Interests in EMU: The Legacy of Barre, Giscard D'estaing, and Pompidou
- 4 Challenging the ‘D‐Mark Zone’: Agenda‐Setting on EMU and the Strategy of Indirection Under Mitterrand, 1981–1989
- 5 French Strategy for the IGC: Making EMU Irreversible
- 6 EMU, the Kohl Chancellorship, and German Political Tradition: The Legacy of Adenauer and Erhard
- 7 The Political Problem of Reconciling Domestic and International Interests in EMU: The Legacy of Schiller and Schmidt
- 8 Negotiating EMU Around the German Model: Agenda‐Setting Under the Kohl Chancellorship, 1982–1989
- 9 German Strategy for the IGC
- 10 Italian Policy Beliefs About EMU: External Discipline Versus Internal Protection
- 11 Framing EMU as a New Vincolo Esterno: Policy Entrepreneurs, Co‐Ordination, and Reflection in Italy, 1988–1990
- 12 Italy and the IGC: Negotiating External Discipline, Avoiding Exclusion, 1990–1991
- 13 The British Political Tradition and EMU: Policy Legacies, Beliefs, and Co‐Ordination
- 14 Resisting EMU: Political Strategy, Policy Entrepreneurship, and Policy Reflection Before the IGC
- 15 John Major: Between the Party and the IGC
- 16 Jacques Delors as Policy Entrepreneur and Ingénieur of the EMU Negotiations: Agenda‐Setting and Oiling the Wheels
- 17 Conclusions and Reflections
- Appendix: List of Interviewees
- References
- Name Index
- Index
(p.802) Appendix: List of Interviewees
(p.802) Appendix: List of Interviewees
- Source:
- The Road To Maastricht
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: An Historical Overview
- 1 Making Sense of the EMU Negotiations
- 2 EMU, the Mitterrand Presidency, and French Political Tradition
- 3 The Political Problem of Reconciling Domestic and International Interests in EMU: The Legacy of Barre, Giscard D'estaing, and Pompidou
- 4 Challenging the ‘D‐Mark Zone’: Agenda‐Setting on EMU and the Strategy of Indirection Under Mitterrand, 1981–1989
- 5 French Strategy for the IGC: Making EMU Irreversible
- 6 EMU, the Kohl Chancellorship, and German Political Tradition: The Legacy of Adenauer and Erhard
- 7 The Political Problem of Reconciling Domestic and International Interests in EMU: The Legacy of Schiller and Schmidt
- 8 Negotiating EMU Around the German Model: Agenda‐Setting Under the Kohl Chancellorship, 1982–1989
- 9 German Strategy for the IGC
- 10 Italian Policy Beliefs About EMU: External Discipline Versus Internal Protection
- 11 Framing EMU as a New Vincolo Esterno: Policy Entrepreneurs, Co‐Ordination, and Reflection in Italy, 1988–1990
- 12 Italy and the IGC: Negotiating External Discipline, Avoiding Exclusion, 1990–1991
- 13 The British Political Tradition and EMU: Policy Legacies, Beliefs, and Co‐Ordination
- 14 Resisting EMU: Political Strategy, Policy Entrepreneurship, and Policy Reflection Before the IGC
- 15 John Major: Between the Party and the IGC
- 16 Jacques Delors as Policy Entrepreneur and Ingénieur of the EMU Negotiations: Agenda‐Setting and Oiling the Wheels
- 17 Conclusions and Reflections
- Appendix: List of Interviewees
- References
- Name Index
- Index