LSE creators

Number of items: 10.
Public
  • Hobolt, Sara, Cramme, Olaf (2012). The growing importance of the EU in national politics means that political union can only succeed with the public’s support.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2012). Labour has a problem that is rooted in the blatant weaknesses of Britain’s democratic system.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2012). The worrying rise of EU intergovernmentalism is the only viable response to the opposing desires in Europe for greater democracy and the reassertion of national sovereignty.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2012). The trend towards the Europeanisation of domestic politics is unstoppable (and good) but for the time being will be messy and uneven.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2011). Cameron’s pandering to euroscepticism and the illusionary ‘national interest’ is a failure of leadership and leaves Britain in a lose-lose situation.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2011). The outcry over EU democratic legitimacy disguises a deeper crisis of capitalism in the liberal West.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2011). It is no wonder that Cameron insisted on a 3-line whip: the alternatives proposed by the eurosceptics are unconvincing, unrealistic and fail to grasp just how the EU actually works.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2011). Deeper fiscal integration within the eurozone would significantly alter the concept of a two-speed Europe. George Osborne’s support signals an important U-turn in British policy on the EU.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2011). The EU’s war against credit rating agencies is symptomatic of a new struggle between politics and the market, but it also lays bare growing tensions in the European project and globalisation as a whole.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2011). The current EU fatalism underestimates the resilience of the system, and a focus on personalities obscures the real imperative for organisational reform.