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Which Is the Real Europe?

Over the course of its 30-year history, the European Union has sometimes embraced two fundamentally different identities, only one of which can possibly be sustained over the long term. At some point, Europeans will need to decide whether their shared project is more than just a marriage of economic convenience.

CAMBRIDGE – This year marks the 30th anniversary of the European Union. When the Maastricht Treaty took effect in 1993, Europeans embarked on a historically unique experiment in supranational governance and shared sovereignty. The EU’s single market allows for the free movement of goods, services, and capital among 27 member states; and, critically, its Schengen Area means open borders between member states (and free movement rights even in non-Schengen member states), granting more than 400 million people an unprecedented form of citizenship that transcends national territories. While free trade is an old idea, the free movement of people on this scale is entirely novel.

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