A Zócalo/Democracy International Event
The United Kingdom’s planned referendum on whether to remain in Europe raises fundamental questions about allegiances—especially in a world in which we’re expected to be good local and global citizens at the same time. What, if anything, do the British owe Europe—and what does it mean to belong in Europe today? As regions from Scotland to Catalonia have sought both local sovereignty and greater connection to Europe, what sort of special deals or concessions should one political entity be able to negotiate as a condition of joining or remaining in larger unions? And how can today’s citizens best balance different loyalties—to hometowns, to countries, to neighbors, and to the world at large—when so many problems and issues cross different borders in different ways? University of Edinburgh political scientist Laura Cram, longtime German and European Parliament member Gerald Häfner, Open Europe Co-Director Stephen Booth, and London School of Economics legal scholar Damian Chalmers visit Zócalo to untangle conflicting allegiances and discuss the meaning of Europe in a confusing time.
*Photo courtesy of Facundo Arrizabalaga/AP Photo.
21 Albemarle Street
London W1S 4BS
United Kingdom
The Takeaway
The U.K. Has Already Opted Out of the ‘Ever Closer Union’ With Europe
But the British May Yet Remain in an EU That Is More Democratic and Stops Obsessing About the Single Currency
On June 23, British citizens will be asked, “Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?” On the surface, this would seem …