The goal wasn't just trade; it was to make war between neighbors not just unthinkable, but materially impossible by pooling strategic resources.
Foundations of European Integration: origins and aims (post-WWII, Schuman Declaration); main treaties and purposes (Paris, Rome, SEA, Maastricht, Amsterdam, Nice, Lisbon); EU values and goals (Art. 2–3 TEU: democracy, rule of law, rights, sustainability); competences (exclusive, shared, supporting); guiding principles (conferral, subsidiarity, proportionality, national parliaments’ role); EU citizenship and rights (status, political rights, Charter)


Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

Lena: Hey Miles! I was thinking about how we take traveling across Europe for granted now, but it’s wild to think the whole European Union started with just coal and steel.
Miles: It really is. It’s a fascinating shift from centuries of war and rivalry to what Robert Schuman called "de facto solidarity." After the destruction of World War II, the goal wasn't just trade; it was to make war between neighbors not just unthinkable, but materially impossible by pooling strategic resources.
Lena: Right, and that small start grew into this massive legal architecture—from the Treaty of Paris all the way to the Lisbon Treaty we use today. It’s like the "constitution" of a whole continent.
Miles: Exactly, and it’s built on very specific values like the rule of law and human dignity. So, let’s dive into how those early post-war aims transformed into the foundational treaties and rights that shape the EU today.