Thisbook analyses Switzerlands European policies using the concept ofdifferentiated European integration, providing a new and original perspectiveon the country. This analytical approach focuses on the similarities betweenSwitzerland's EU policies and the integration of EU member states. The latterhave often been the focus of research as Switzerland is the last WesternEuropean country not to have become a member of the European Union (EU) or theEuropean Economic Area (EEA). The book claims that Switzerlands position onthe European integration map is different in terms of degree from many EUmember states, but not different in kind. The cornerstone of the book is newempirical data quantitatively measuring Switzerlands differentiatedintegration during the period 1990 2010. The data rely on the sectoralagreements Switzerland concluded with the EU and the voluntary incorporation ofEU law into domestic legislation. The book shows, among other findings, thatover time Swiss European policies have begun to resemble integration policiesand that the more they did so, the more dynamically they evolved.
1. Introduction.- 1.1 Switzerland as a case of differentiated integration.- 1.1.1 Early differentiated integration: The history of the reluctant Europeans.- 1.1.2 At the crossroads: Switzerland re-invents the 'bilateral way'.- 1.1.3 Sectoral agreements: Integration with formal shortcomings.- 1.1.4 The 'autonomous adaptation' policy: A Swiss peculiarity?.- 1.2 Form and function of Switzerland's differentiated integration.- 1.2.1 The quality of Switzerland's integration: Quasi-member or not?.- 1.2.2 The reasons for Switzerland's integration: Theoretical outlier or not?.- 1.3 Connecting the pieces of the puzzle: Overview of the book.- 1.3.1 Measuring Switzerland's differentiated integration empirically.- 1.3.2 Analysing Switzerll³&