Rupnik, J.: The implications of changes in East-Central Europe for European integration. - S. 7-24 Hassner, P.: The European Union and the Balkans. - S. 25-46 Tatu, M.: Russia and the world. - S. 47-84 Brands, M. C.; Havenaar, R.: De central plaats van Duitsland in de Europese politiek : bindende kracht of bron van divergentie? - S. 85-136
Khader, B.: Le partenariat Euro-Mediterraneen: une approche singuliere pour une Mediterrannee plurielle. - S.1-24. Linden, E. van der: De Conferentie van Barcelona: agendapunten en aanbevelingen. - S.25-28. Zaoual, H.: Aspects culturels, islam et fondamentalisme: influences sur la politique regionale. - S.29-33. Burgat, F.: L'islamisme en face. - S.35-45. Ben Ali, D.: La securite dans le bassin mediterraneen: evolution en Afrique du Nord et impact sur la region. - S.47-53. Stürmer, M.: Security in the Mediterranean region: evolution in North-Africa and impact on the whole region. - S.55-59
Confronted with acute SE problems, the Socialist & the Christian Democratic trade unions in 1976 strengthened their "Common Trade Unions" Front' (with about 2 million members out of a total of 2,300,000 wage- & salary-earners in Belgium) in view of negotiating with employers & with the government, for which the trade unions have submitted a common platform. This common front has antecedents on the local, regional, & professional levels, but has never been & never will be of a permanent nature. This is due as much to historical, as to ideological causes. The principle of class struggle is basic to the socialist union, & christian doctrine is basic to the Christian Democrat concept. The two unions are imbalanced in their linguistic division. Socialists dominate the French-speaking South, while the Christians dominate the Flemish-speaking North. Each confederation wants to maintain its identity. From the employer's view (& to some extent completely independent from the trade union's common front) representatives of employer's organizations have launched the idea that a new & comprehensive "social contract" should be negotiated. The Christian Democratic Union favors such a pact, but since the socialist trade union rejects this idea--which would lead to a further integration in the capitalist system--the probability for such a pact to be realized at present is rather low. Modified HA.
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