Euro-Centrism vs. International Thinking
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22151/politikon.12.2Keywords:
eurocentrism, international thinking, European identity, nationalism, EU, migration policyAbstract
If European people are asked to answer the question, “Which of your different identities has the highest rank in your personal sense: the local, the national or the European?”, a high percentage rate would definitely still report to the two former and only a minority would define themselves primarily as an European citizen. This is no surprise. On the one hand, one defines its identity through that origin, with which he or she has the strongest relation. On the other hand it is extremely difficult for a huge and often aloof entity like the European Union to develop a common European identity that evokes those impressions and sentiments that people combine with their familiar environment.
