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)


The transition followed the "Monnet Method," which favored incremental, concrete achievements over grand political philosophy. It began with the 1951 Treaty of Paris, which pooled coal and steel resources to make war materially impossible. This expanded through the 1957 Treaties of Rome, which created a common market for goods and services, and eventually led to the 1992 Maastricht Treaty, which officially established the "European Union" and introduced the Euro and EU citizenship. The process culminated in the 2009 Lisbon Treaty, which provided the EU with a legal personality and made its Charter of Fundamental Rights legally binding.
Article 2 of the Treaty on European Union outlines the foundational values of the bloc, including human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law, and human rights. To protect these, the EU uses a "toolbox" of mechanisms. This includes Article 7, known as the "nuclear option," which can suspend a member state's voting rights for serious breaches. More recently, the EU introduced "Rule of Law Conditionality," which allows the Commission to suspend budget payments to countries if legal breaches, such as a lack of judicial independence, threaten the sound management of EU funds.
The EU operates on the principle of "conferral," meaning it only has powers explicitly granted to it by member states. In areas of "exclusive competence," such as international trade, customs, and monetary policy for Eurozone countries, only the EU can legislate. In areas of "shared competence," such as the environment, consumer protection, and agriculture, both the EU and member states can pass laws. However, once the EU legislates in a shared area, member states are "pre-empted" and lose the ability to act independently in that specific space.
Subsidiarity is a "gatekeeper" principle designed to ensure that decisions are made as closely to the citizens as possible. It dictates that in areas of shared competence, the EU should only act if an objective cannot be sufficiently achieved by national, regional, or local governments and can be better achieved at the Union level due to its scale. National parliaments monitor this through an "early warning system," where they can issue "yellow cards" to force the European Commission to review and potentially withdraw legislative proposals that overstep these boundaries.
EU citizenship is automatic for any national of a member state and adds to, rather than replaces, national citizenship. Key rights include the freedom to move, reside, and work anywhere within the EU territory. Politically, it grants the right to vote and stand as a candidate in municipal and European Parliament elections in any member state where the citizen resides. Additionally, EU citizens have the right to consular protection from any other member state's embassy when traveling outside the EU if their own country is not represented.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
