Author (Person) | Skinner, Marianne |
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Series Title | Journal of Contemporary European Research |
Series Details | Vol.6, No.3, Autumn 2010, p299-315 |
Publication Date | September 2010 |
ISSN | 1815-347X |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
Abstract: Drawing on a content analysis of party manifestos and a survey of Norwegian MPs, this article examines the nuances in, and the causality of, the different Norwegian parties’ Euroscepticism. The study of the comparative party politics of Euroscepticism, which focuses on ideology and strategy, falls short of accounting for the Norwegian case, where, unlike other European countries, the parties’ Euroscepticism is exceptionally stable and appears across the political spectrum. Therefore, the article tests an alternative set of theories, drawn from the literature on opinion formation on European integration, to find a more suitable framework for analysing and explaining the motivation of Norwegian Euroscepticism. The analysis shows that Norwegian party-based Euroscepticism can be divided into three types when it comes to its strength and policy opposition, with the Centre Party and the Socialist Left Party on the ‘hardest’ end of the Euroscepticism scale, followed by the Christian Democratic Party and the Liberal Party, and finally, the Labour Party and the Progress Party. Furthermore, the analysis indicates that Norwegian Eurosceptic party stances on Europe are primarily driven by political values and political culture concerns, except for the Progress Party, which base its Eurosceptic motivation on economic utilitarianism and political culture. [Free registration is required at http://www.jcer.net/ for full text access to this article] |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.jcer.net/index.php/jcer/issue/archive |
Countries / Regions | Norway |