000 02859nam a2200433Ii 4500
001 9781787694958
003 UtOrBLW
005 20210303084753.0
006 m o d
007 cr un|||||||||
008 200416t20202020enk ob 001 0 eng d
020 _a9781787694958
040 _aUtOrBLW
_beng
_erda
_cUtOrBLW
043 _ae------
050 4 _aGF540
_b.O98 2020
072 7 _aSOC015000
_2bisacsh
072 7 _aRGC
_2bicssc
080 _a304
082 0 4 _a304.20940902
_223
100 1 _aOuthwaite, William,
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aTransregional Europe /
_cauthored by William Outhwaite (Newcastle University, UK).
264 1 _bEmerald Publishing Limited,
300 _a1 online resource (152 pages) ;
_ccm
500 _aIncludes index.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 _aChapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Europe Imagined: Regions and States in Europe -- Chapter 3: Seeing Europe in Time and Space -- Chapter 4: Regions an sich: Natural, Linguistic, Religious -- Chapter 5: Planning for EUrope -- Chapter 6: Eurasia: Complementary or Competitor? -- Chapter 7: Migrants and Tourists -- Chapter 8: Whither Europe? Planned and Unplanned Macro-regions.
520 _aTransregional Europe continues a line of argument developed in European Society (2008), Europe Since 1989 (2016) and Contemporary Europe (2017). It integrates work in human geography and planning with related scholarship in history and the other social sciences, covering public perceptions of European macro-regions and EU macro-regional planning. Are Europeans increasingly thinking, like North Americans, of their (sub-) continent in broad North/South and East/West categories? Are the macro-regional constructs such as the Danube or Baltic region identified or constructed by European policy-makers real, imaginary, or both? What is the relation between Europe and Eurasia and their respective political structures? Transregional Europe bridges the gap between stereotypical generalisations about southerners, the 'wild East', and so on and the constructions assembled by national and transnational policy-makers. It should be of interest to students of Europe within a wide range of disciplines and interdisciplinary programmes: not just sociology or European studies but also human geography, politics, economics, international relations and cultural studies.
588 0 _aPrint version record.
650 0 _aHuman geography
_zEurope.
651 0 _aEurope
_xGeography.
650 7 _aSocial Science, Human Geography.
_2bisacsh
650 7 _aHuman geography.
_2bicssc
776 _z9781787694941
856 4 0 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1108/9781787694934
999 _c29501
_d29501