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Our Standing Group on the European Union (SGEU) was thrilled to present a brand-new virtual workshop designed to help early career scholars improve their research in progress.
This one-day workshop was organised around panel discussions, each addressing a specific theme.
We invited contributions related to EU studies, specifically those addressing new research agendas, methodologies and innovative theoretical approaches that capture what has been described in the literature as times of ‘permanent emergency’ (Wolff and Ladi, 2021), ‘polycrisis’ (Zeitlin and al., 2019), ‘permacrisis’ (Zuleeg and al., 2019).
These concepts account for the rapidly transforming EU governance and policies through a series of contestations of its model in (potential) candidate countries, the importance of the far-right in EU domestic politics, the challenges to the rule of law inside the EU and with the potential to fracture the EU with new transversal cleavages.
At the same time, following the pandemic and Russia’s war on Ukraine, the EU has proven resilient, demonstrating unity with Brexit, being proactive on sanctions towards Russia and with ambitions on the green and digital agenda but also regarding its strategic autonomy.
Contributions addressed the following questions:
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