Étude | 07/06/2011 
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Questioned (wrongly) “Spanish cucumbers”, abstention to the Security Council during the vote deciding on an intervention in Libya, on abandonment sometimes considered "one-sided" of the nuclear power, the deep internal debates on the assistant to the countries of the Eurozone …
So many recent events, of very different nature, that remind us all the interest of an analysis detailed and opened by the evolution of this major country of the European Union.

A few months ago, Notre Europe has turned to a series of experts who examine the changes that have taken place in Germany’s European policy. This study explain to us what are the current driving actors and forces in Germany and if this country can really be considered more inward-looking than it used to be. Is this a long-term trend? Contributions which make perfectly echo for the current political context.

This study published in July 2010 was directed by Renaud Dehousse and Elvire Fabry.




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Articles by Henrik Uterwedde :Articles by Stefan Seidendorf :Articles by Daniela Schwarzer :Articles by William E. Paterson :Articles by Almut Möller :Articles by Janis A. Emmanouilidis :Articles by Timo Behr :
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Authors
Professor Uterwedde is Deputy Director of the Deutsch-Französische Institut (dfi).
Head of the EU Department of the Deutsch-Französische Institut (dfi).
Head of the Research Division EU-Integration at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP).
Honorary Professor for German and European Politics at the Aston Centre for Europe, Aston University.
Head of the Alfred von Oppenheim Center for European Policy Studies at the German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP).
Senior Policy Analyst at the European Policy Centre.
Research associate and researcher at the Finnish Institute for International Affairs. World Governance, comparative regional integration. Email: tbher@notre-europe.eu
In view
Study by Timo Behr, Janis A. Emmanouilidis, Almut Möller, William E. Paterson, Daniela Schwarzer, Stefan Seidendorf, Henrik Uterwedde | 02/07/2010
Directed by Renaud Dehousse and Elvire Fabry. At a moment when Germany is the focus of much attention on the European scene, Notre Europe has turned to a series of experts who examine the changes that have taken place in Germany’s European policy. What are the current driving actors and forces? Can Germany really be considered more inward-looking than it used to be? Is this a long-term trend? Contributions have been made by German (or German-Greek) experts and are completed by a British external point of view.
Project
Research project