European Public Opinion about Security: Who Can Help Us in a Threatening World?
This book’s aim is to determine empirically whether Europeans see their multiple security needs best advanced by a consistent reliance on the EU’s security policies or by differentiating allies according to their capacity to deal with different types of security threats, economic, military, and climate change. It uses original survey data to test whether people see their country facing multiple threats to their security. If they see a threat, do they want their national government to seek help from the EU, the United Nations or NATO or have their national government look after national security on its own? Given substantial differences in public opinion, we test whether this is due to individual differences in their political attitudes and social characteristics; national context; or differences in the capacity of multi-national institutions. The results have important implications for the public policies of national governments and the EU and for theories of European integration.

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European Public Opinion about Security: Who Can Help Us in a Threatening World?
This book’s aim is to determine empirically whether Europeans see their multiple security needs best advanced by a consistent reliance on the EU’s security policies or by differentiating allies according to their capacity to deal with different types of security threats, economic, military, and climate change. It uses original survey data to test whether people see their country facing multiple threats to their security. If they see a threat, do they want their national government to seek help from the EU, the United Nations or NATO or have their national government look after national security on its own? Given substantial differences in public opinion, we test whether this is due to individual differences in their political attitudes and social characteristics; national context; or differences in the capacity of multi-national institutions. The results have important implications for the public policies of national governments and the EU and for theories of European integration.

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European Public Opinion about Security: Who Can Help Us in a Threatening World?

European Public Opinion about Security: Who Can Help Us in a Threatening World?

by Bernhard Weßels, Richard Rose
European Public Opinion about Security: Who Can Help Us in a Threatening World?

European Public Opinion about Security: Who Can Help Us in a Threatening World?

by Bernhard Weßels, Richard Rose

Hardcover

$44.99 
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Overview

This book’s aim is to determine empirically whether Europeans see their multiple security needs best advanced by a consistent reliance on the EU’s security policies or by differentiating allies according to their capacity to deal with different types of security threats, economic, military, and climate change. It uses original survey data to test whether people see their country facing multiple threats to their security. If they see a threat, do they want their national government to seek help from the EU, the United Nations or NATO or have their national government look after national security on its own? Given substantial differences in public opinion, we test whether this is due to individual differences in their political attitudes and social characteristics; national context; or differences in the capacity of multi-national institutions. The results have important implications for the public policies of national governments and the EU and for theories of European integration.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783031862625
Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland
Publication date: 04/20/2025
Series: Palgrave Studies in European Union Politics
Pages: 88
Product dimensions: 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Bernhard Weßels is Senior Fellow at the Wissenschaftszentrum für Sozialforschung Berlin and longtime director of the German Election Study and professor at Humboldt University Berlin, Germany.

Richard Rose is Professor and Director of the Centre for the Study of Public Policy at the University of Strathclyde, UK and a Visiting Fellow at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: HOW THREATS TO SECURITY DIFFER.- Chapter 2: A CHOICE OF ALLIES.- Chapter 3: PUBLIC OPINION MATTERS.- Chapter 4: SIZING UP THREATS.- Chapter 5: WHO WANTS WHICH ALLIES?.- Chapter 6: EUROPEANS PRAGMATIC ABOUT SECURITY.

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