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1986 enlargement of the European Communities

Spain and Portugal acceded to the European Communities, now the European Union, in 1986. This was the third enlargement of the Communities, following on from the 1973 and 1981 enlargements. Their accessions are considered to be a part of the broader Mediterranean enlargement of the European Union.[1][2]

  EC members in 1986
  New EC members admitted in 1986
Monument in Madrid marking Spain's accession to the EC

Both countries had been under dictatorships until just over a decade prior to the accession, with Spain under the military dictatorship of Francisco Franco, and Portugal under the corporatist dictatorship of the Estado Novo. This had meant that, whilst both countries had previously had relationships with the Communities in some form or another, they were ineligible to become members. The mid-1970s brought the death of Franco in Spain, and the Carnation Revolution in Portugal, which rapidly pushed both countries towards democracy. Membership talks began with both countries a few years later.

Spain and Portugal acceded to the Communities on 1 January 1986.[3] The accession took place without any official ceremony other than the raising of the Spanish and Portuguese flags in Brussels, after a period of more than six years of negotiations between the Communities and the two countries.[4] The accession talks were particularly prolonged by concerns over the Spanish fishing fleet, which was larger than the entire Community fleet put together, as well as severe governmental turbulence in Portugal, where several governments collapsed and one Prime Minister died in an aeroplane crash during the negotiations.

Some scholars at the time predicted that increased competition from Europe would lead to economic problems for Spain and Portugal; however, in the years since, both countries' economies have benefited overall from the accession. The enlargement is also credited by some with helping to stabilise the fledgling democracies of both countries, as well as speeding up the decolonisation of the Portuguese Empire; whilst there is broadly consensus that membership played some role in these processes, there remains debate as to whether membership was the deciding factor in these changes, or whether it merely contributed.

History edit

Spain edit

Relations under Franco edit

Spain first applied for association with the European Economic Community (EEC), the general economic arm of the three European Communities, on 10 February 1962.[5] The country was ineligible for full membership as a direct consequence of its dictatorship; whilst there was no specific provision in the treaty establishing the EEC requiring that Member States be democracies,[6] the European Parliament made clear just months after the application that an undemocratic Spain would never have any relationship negotiated "closer than a commercial treaty", with further European integration in mind.[7][8]

The Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe passed a resolution by 70 votes to 31 in its 14th ordinary session in May 1962 calling for members of the EEC to "examine the possibility of some form of economic agreement between Spain and the Community, bearing in mind the constitutional changes that will be necessary before any form of political association can be contemplated".[9] However, the application caused some controversy; a number of members of the European Parliament questioned whether the application was acceptable, given Spain's dictatorship.[10][11]

With the question of association still unresolved by 1964, the head of the Spanish mission to the EEC sent another letter on 14 February renewing the request for association status.[12] Talks were subsequently scheduled to begin in the autumn of that year.[8] Eventually, in 1967, the Council of the EEC approved a mandate for the commission to negotiate with Spain, and a trade agreement was signed in June 1970.[13] However, this was a trade preference agreement, as opposed to an association agreement; this meant only reciprocity in trade concessions, as opposed to the economic development assistance and the possibility of eventual full membership that was granted through association status to, for instance, Greece and Turkey.[14] Discussions remained in the 1970s about what the future relationship between the EEC and Spain might look like, after the formation of an EEC–Spain joint committee.[15]

The Spanish transition and applying for Community membership edit

 
Oreja and Suárez with Joop den Uyl, the Prime Minister of the Netherlands, in August 1977, following Spain's application

Following the death of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco, who had ruled over the country for 36 years, and the beginnings of the Spanish transition to democracy, rumours had been circulating for some time in 1977 about the possibility of a Spanish request for membership of the EEC.[16] On 26 July, the new democratic government of Spain led by Adolfo Suárez wrote three letters to the President of the Council of Ministers of the European Communities, Henri Simonet, each requesting the admission of Spain to each different European Community.[17] These letters were hand-delivered by the Foreign Minister of Spain, Marcelino Oreja, to the President of the European Commission, Roy Jenkins, in Brussels on 28 July 1977.[18][19]

At the time, significant concerns were raised with regards to whether or not Spain would be accepted into the EEC. Spanish press talked of a potential veto from France and Italy against its accession, on the basis of the potential threat it would pose to their agricultural sectors.[20][21][13] However, more than a year after the application was made, after extensive consultation and negotiation with existing Member States, the European Commission published in November 1978 an official opinion on Spain's application for membership.[22] The opinion recommended that membership negotiations begin, but noted that the process to becoming a member of the EEC was likely to be a slow one, citing both financial and bureaucratic barriers.[23]

Membership negotiations edit

On 5 February 1979, negotiations were opened between Spain and the European Council – the committee of leaders of the Member States of the European Communities. Roy Jenkins declared during a speech at the opening of the negotiations that "Spain is a part of Europe, and Europe is incomplete without Spain".[24][25][26]

 
Plaque in the Royal Palace of Madrid marking the 12 June 1985 signing of the agreement that brought Spain into the EC.

An attempted coup d'état in Spain in February 1981, in which elements of the Spanish Civil Guard attempted to remove the democratically elected government from office, represented a significant point of international attention during the membership negotiations. The EEC was no exception to this, expressing its concern about the unfolding events.[27] The attempt was unsuccessful, and following its failure, the European Council met on 23–24 March 1981. It subsequently released a statement expressing its "great satisfaction at the reaction of the King, the government, and the Spanish people, faced by recent attacks against the democratic system of their country".[28] Felipe González, the leader of the opposition Spanish Socialist Workers' Party, went on a tour of Western Europe in March of the same year to "urge" nations to admit Spain to the EEC "as quickly as possible";[29] the EEC was, according to a Spanish diplomat speaking in 1982, seen as "a synonym for democracy" among the population.[30] In spite of this, the speed of the negotiations was not significantly increased by the events.[31]

A year later, the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party were elected into government following the 1982 Spanish general election, making González the Prime Minister. Prior to the election, Spanish negotiations with the Communities had reportedly stalled; this was not only due to the coup attempt, but also thanks to opposition from the French government over concerns related to the Common Agricultural Policy leading to greater competition from Spain.[32] González once again put emphasis on the EEC during his election campaign, and at the same time downplayed the issue of Spanish membership of NATO, which had been a controversial issue within the debate about opening Spain up to the world for a number of years.[33]

Concerns were also raised over the potential impact of Spain's accession in particular on the operation of the Common Fisheries Policy. The Spanish fishing fleet was larger than the entire fleet of the existing Community members put together,[34] which had presented an issue in a similar manner during the negotiation of an interim agreement on fishing between Spain and the Community.[35] It was evident during the Spanish negotiations for admission that Spain had become more responsive to the fishing sector, as a consequence of the high propensity of illegal fishing leading to fishermen "mobilising as a socio-occupational group".[36] The Spanish Act of Accession eventually devoted fifty of its pages to fisheries-related matters,[37] around 10% of the entire treaty.[38]

Beginning to tire of the long negotiations by December 1983, the French government requested a deadline be imposed on the accession talks, proposing 30 September 1984 as the date.[39] The French government continued applying pressure in favour of this deadline into 1984,[40] and it was agreed to by the Member States at the March 1984 Brussels Summit of the European Council.[41][42] However, the agreed deadline was not met, with questions over fishing, agriculture and steel still remaining by the end of September, and more negotiations scheduled beyond the deadline.[43] At the end of October 1984, a commitment was made that Spain and Portugal would join the Communities on 1 January 1986, although there remained "difficulties" still in a number of areas of the negotiations.[44] This commitment was confirmed by a vote at the European Council summit on 3 December 1984, so long as "final negotiations [were] successful".[45]

Portugal edit

Relations under the Estado Novo edit

In July 1959, just over a year after the EEC was established, the government of Portugal began the process of establishing a diplomatic mission to it, and to Euratom the same month.[46][47] However, Portugal considered its "multi-continental structure" (in reference to its many overseas colonies) to be incompatible with EEC membership; even had it wished to join, its contemporary dictatorship would have made an accession difficult to impossible.[48]

In spite of these factors, Portugal was a founding member of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), which was initially aimed to compete with the EEC as a European common economic zone.[49] EFTA, constituting something closer to a pure free trade zone than the EEC, was a more palatable prospect at the time for Portugal than taking on the full rules and regulations of the EEC.[50] At the time of the organisation's foundation in 1960, Portugal was still under the Estado Novo corporatist dictatorship, led by António de Oliveira Salazar; a year later, the government of Portugal published a report decrying the decision taken by members of the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation to establish the EEC "without consulting their partners in the Organisation", and saying that "The Portuguese Government is once again convinced that the spirit of understanding and solidarity that underpinned the establishment and operation of the European Free Trade Association will prevail".[51]

A Portuguese government report completed at the start of 1962 acknowledged that seeking entry as a member of the EEC would have been unlikely to end in success, and suggested that an application for associate status might have been a better option.[48] A few months later, in April 1962, the Portuguese Ambassador to Brussels was instructed to open negotiations with the EEC to move towards this goal, in spite of potential hostilities due to "disapproval of the basic principles" of contemporary Portuguese government policy.[52] However, the Portuguese government did not clarify what type of negotiations were being asked for, or what the future relationship they envisaged looked like.[53] There was also significant international opposition to any meaningful agreement being made with Portugal, as a consequence of the country's authoritarian regime, with the General Secretary of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions intervening in June saying "We remain convinced that the Members of the Council of Ministers will not permit countries subjected to a regime like the Portuguese government of today to enter a community whose primary reason to exist is to strengthen the free world".[54] The 1962 negotiations were later postponed indefinitely.[55]

Portugal once again looked to open negotiations with the EEC in 1969.[55] These negotiations were more fruitful, and eventually culminated in a trade agreement between the EEC and Portugal,[56][57] albeit one that came at the same time as the EEC were negotiating free trade agreements with all Member States of EFTA.[58][49]

Diplomatic efforts towards Portuguese membership of the EEC were restarted in the early 1970s, still during the time of the Estado Novo dictatorship, but with Marcelo Caetano having assumed the office of Prime Minister after Salazar's death.[59] Exploratory talks began in confidence on 7 January 1971,[60] with Caetano's attitude to Portuguese-EEC relations being described as "pragmatic", seeing that Europe would continue to be incredibly important for the country as their main trading partner.[53]

On 19 December 1972, the EEC and the Portuguese government concluded an agreement significantly reducing tariffs on imports in trade between the two.[61] This was the last move towards Europe on the part of Portugal before the fall of the Estado Novo regime.[53]

EC loans and application under democracy edit

 
Soares (right) in the Netherlands on 9 March 1977, just weeks before the Portuguese application

Following the Carnation Revolution of 1974 and the first democratic elections in 1975, the new Portuguese government started to take greater steps towards European integration. Over the course of the early 1970s, the European Investment Bank loaned millions of units of account – a pre-Euro European system of monetary exchange without preference to a single currency – to Portugal, with the objective of "giving its fullest support to Portugal's efforts to strengthen democracy and promote social and economic progress".[62] In June 1976, the exchange rate for units of account to US dollars meant the amount loaned at the time, UA 70 million, was worth $79.1 million,[63] equivalent to $330,000,000 in 2023.

The first democratically elected government of Portugal spoke of its programme as one that "intends that Portugal be present in the common effort of democratic European countries in the political, economic, social and cultural transformation of the old continent".[64] These efforts bore their first fruits in September 1976, with the entrance of Portugal into the Council of Europe.[65][66]

In 1977, just before Portugal made its formal application to join the Communities, Mário Soares, the Prime Minister of Portugal, and his Foreign Minister both went on a tour of European capitals, attempting to gather preliminary support for his country's accession.[67][68] Shortly afterwards, on 28 March, Portugal made their formal application to join the European Communities,[69][70] with a series of three letters written by Soares to David Owen, the President of the council.[71] The Portuguese government at the time claimed that the application was not "the decision of a government" but rather "the decision of a people".[67]

Just over a year after the application was made, on 19 May 1978, the Commission issued a positive opinion on the Portuguese application for membership, following which membership negotiations were opened.[72] Although the opinion recommended that the Portuguese application be considered, it also highlighted significant dangers inherent to a Portuguese accession in the country's state at the time, noting that "profound social and economic reforms" would be required before admission could be successful.[73]

Governmental turbulence edit

In the immediate months following the opening of negotiations, there was some concern expressed over the level of support within the Portuguese populace for membership of the Communities, with the French newspaper Le Monde reporting that half of the population of Lisbon were unaware of what the Common Market was, rising to 72% in Porto.[74] Furthermore, at the end of 1979, after the government collapsed several times, Parliament was dissolved and fresh elections were called, leading to the election of a new Prime Minister, Francisco de Sá Carneiro.[75] However, after having been in office for only a year, Carneiro died in the 1980 Camarate air crash.[76][77] He was replaced as Prime Minister by Francisco Pinto Balsemão, whose government highlighted in their program concerns over "negative economic and social consequences" resulting from Community regulations that "suppose a different stage of structural evolution" in a Member State.[78] During Balsemão's government, a new Transitional Protocol was agreed between the EEC and Portugal, adjusting some of the tariffs applicable to trade between the two, with "a view to the accession of the Portuguese Republic to the Communities".[79]

In 1983, amid a storm of resignations, Balsemão's government too collapsed, and the 1983 Portuguese legislative election was called.[80][77] The elections led to the return of the Socialist Party, and consequently the return of Mário Soares as Prime Minister. However, with insufficient support in the Portuguese Assembly, Soares was forced to form a coalition with Carneiro's party, the Social Democratic Party.[81] The new coalition's program stated that "accession to the EEC in good time and under the right conditions [...] is the top priority of Portuguese economic and foreign policy".[82]

Internal political reactions edit

After 23 meetings of negotiations between ministers in Portugal and the Communities, on 24 October 1984, a joint statement was signed in Dublin between Soares, Garret FitzGerald, the president of the European Council, and Lorenzo Natali, the Vice-President of the commission, "reaffirming the objective" of Portugal joining the Community on 1 January 1986.[83][84] In debates in the Portuguese Assembly, the Socialist Party, the Social Democratic Party and the Independent Social Democratic Association all expressed their agreement with the accession arrangements.[85]

The planned entrance was not entirely without opposition; some members of the Portuguese Democratic Movement, which had been an important force in Portuguese politics at the time, claimed the accession was a "myth" that "served as an alibi" for the Portuguese government to "avoid being confronted with the disastrous economic and social consequences of its policy",[86] whilst the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) member Carlos Carvalhas claimed the EEC were "ready to sacrifice [...] the interests of other countries".[87] The Communist-led union Intersindical stood with the PCP, who still exist today, in opposing EEC membership, on the grounds of what they considered to be loss of economic control that it would cause.[88] However, the Communist Party was the only Portuguese political party at the time consistently opposed to EEC membership,[89] and they began to receive fewer and fewer votes starting in the mid-1980s, around the time of accession.[90]

International reaction edit

United Kingdom and Gibraltar edit

The status of the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar was a significant sticking point in the negotiations for Spain's accession. The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party were elected into government in 1982 on a manifesto including both EEC membership and a return of the territory to Spain.[91] Following the election, the Spanish government re-opened the border with Gibraltar to pedestrians on "humanitarian" grounds, which laid the foundation for further negotiations with the United Kingdom, although no other types of traffic were permitted through.[92] These negotiations continued for some time, with one suggestion being that the territory could be turned into a NATO military base with shared sovereignty as a consequence.[93] The negotiations surrounding the status of Gibraltar were described at the time by Fernando Morán, the Spanish foreign minister, as "the most decisive and delicate moment" of Spain's accession negotiations.[94]

The government of the United Kingdom at the time declared themselves publicly to be in favour of Portugal and Spain joining the Communities,[95] with the Minister of State for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office saying that the country had been a "staunch supporter of the accession".[96] However, Margaret Thatcher, the British Prime Minister, stated in 1983 that Spain could not accede to the Communities "until the restrictions on the border between Spain and Gibraltar are lifted";[97] Lord Trefgarne, an undersecretary of state at the time, even went so far as to say that the restrictions were "incompatible with the obligations" of Spain as a member of the EEC.[98] Thatcher's government's insistence on a complete re-opening of the border prior to EEC entry "angered" the Spanish government of the time;[99] however, they also said that they would be prepared to allow vehicular and other crossings, rather than just those on foot.[100] After even further protracted negotiations, the border was fully reopened on 5 February 1985.[101]

Greek veto edit

From 1982 onwards, Greece had been trying to secure approval by the European Council for the Integrated Mediterranean Programmes (IMPs), a series of financial aid measures for disadvantaged regions of the Communities.[102] Having had little success, and with the idea still under "consideration" by the Council several years later,[102] Greece threatened to veto the accessions of Spain and Portugal.[103] The veto was based on Greece's claims that its economy would not be able to cope with more economically weak Member States joining, without receiving agricultural subsidies for its poorest regions that had not yet been approved.[104]

In late 1984, Andreas Papandreou, the Prime Minister of Greece, formally confirmed that the only blocker for Greek approval of the accessions was the availability of financial subsidy through the IMPs.[105] This drew criticism from other Member States, who argued that Greek financial demands to the Communities should not affect the accession of new members,[102] and led to doubts from Gaston Thorn, the President of the commission, that completing the agreements would be possible for an accession date of 1 January 1986.[106]

Negotiations continued on into 1985, and on 29 May, the Italian Minister for Foreign Affairs Giulio Andreotti, in conjunction with Spain's Fernando Morán and the Portuguese Finance Minister Ernâni Lopes, announced that an agreement had been reached.[107] Some parts of the IMPs would be implemented, thereby increasing EEC funding to Greece;[104] consequentially, Greece dropped its reservations, and Portugal and Spain would enter the "Europe of Twelve" on 1 January 1986.[108] In total, Greece received US$2,000,000,000 in additional aid as a consequence of the negotiations,[104][107] equivalent to $5,700,000,000 in 2023.

Impact edit

Data in the table is as of 1986, unless otherwise stated.
Member countries Capital Population Area (km2) Population

per km2

GDP
(billion US$)
GDP
per capita (US$)
Languages[note 1]
  Portugal Lisbon 10,030,621[109] 92,389[110] 108.57 38.746[111] 3,863 Portuguese
  Spain Madrid 38,531,195[109] 504,782[110] 76.33 251.321[112] 6,523 Spanish
Accession countries 48,561,816 597,171 81.32 290.067 5,973.15 2
Existing members 273,271,000[110][note 2] 1,664,740[110] 164.15 2,187[113][note 3] 8,003.04 7[114]
EU12 after accessions 321,832,816 2,261,911 142.28 2,477.067 7,696.75 9[38]

Democratic transition edit

Membership of the Communities is widely seen as having assisted the transitions to democracy of Spain and Portugal; however, there is some debate as to what extent Community membership is responsible for this.[115] The prerequisite that a state should be a democracy before joining the Communities has been described as a motivating factor for democratisation, and such a requirement has been suggested for agreements such as the North American Free Trade Agreement as a result.[116] Eurobarometer surveys between 1985 and 1997 found a significant majority of Portuguese citizens felt that EU membership had benefited their country; this peaked at 82% of the population in 1991, before falling to a low of 67% in 1997.[117]

Acquis communautaire edit

Special arrangements agreed for Spain and Portugal as new EEC members meant that, whilst in principle they were subject to the acquis communautaire of the Common Fisheries Policy, they were not fully integrated into it for many years.[37] It has also been argued that the acquis on environmental policy "imposed significant costs" on accession countries; compliance pressure and capacity building assistance from the Communities, later the EU, has been described as "necessary but not sufficient" alone to foster successful environmental governance in the accession countries.[118] However, other scholars have argued that the eventual benefit from the acquis has outweighed this, and pointed out that Spain has come to ardently insist on new EU members taking up the entire acquis.[119]

International relations edit

Shortly after formally joining in 1986, both Spain and Portugal agreed to proposed changes to the Treaty of Rome which limited individual countries' abilities to veto proposed legislation affecting tariffs and trade, and committed to a common foreign policy for Community Member States.[120] They also expressed themselves to be in favour of a doubling of the research budget of the EEC over a period of 5 years.[121]

The accession of Portugal to the European Communities also had an impact on the decolonisation of Portuguese colonies in Africa and on Europe-Africa relations consequently. Whilst the acquis communautaire itself had been weak, dominated only by the European Political Cooperation, the acquis politique was very much in favour of decolonisation,[122] a process which Portugal was pushed to adopt in order to join the Communities - although there is debate as to whether the planned accession was the primary cause.[123][124]

Economic impact edit

The accession led to significant benefits for both in terms of economic stability and strength,[125] and the average per-capita income of Portuguese and Spanish citizens grew significantly, reaching 74% and 83% respectively of the EU average by 2003.[116] Structural funds offered by European Community membership were of particular importance in easing pressure on the countries' economies, especially following the Single European Act reforms that doubled the amount of structural funds available between 1988 and 1993.[126] In Portugal, these funds were invested primarily in road infrastructure, public buildings and urban renewal, indirectly creating many new jobs in the construction industry, which led to a significant (if small in absolute terms) increase in "unskilled or low-skilled" migration to the country.[127]

The dismantling of tariff barriers subsequent to both countries' accessions led some scholars to predict the collapse of industry in the two countries; a columnist of the Harvard International Review, Anne Robinson, predicted "both Spain's and Portugal's generally under-productive and inefficient industries will collapse, creating profitable new markets for exporters in Europe's modernised north".[128] "Restrictive administrative practices" in Spain, however, are noted as having "penalised" products from abroad, placing a preference on locally produced ones.[129] Concerns were also expressed over potential impacts of the Common Agricultural Policy on the Portuguese farming industry, especially with regard to pushes for afforestation and extensification - although these were additionally noted to have benefits for some industries, including in logging and paper production.[130]

See also edit

References edit

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Notes edit

  1. ^ Includes only national languages; several Member States have various co-official languages, including Spain
  2. ^ Calculated by summing the 1986 mid-year estimates for the existing members of the Communities as of 1986 from the UN report
  3. ^ World Bank data is insufficient for this purpose, as it appears to make no distinction between West Germany and East Germany in its historical data. The data here is an approximate estimate based on the latest available GNP data presented in the CIA World Factbook 1986 edition.

External links edit

  • University of Pittsburgh's Archive of European Integration, with relevant Bulletins of the European Communities and supplements
  • Digital Research in European Studies' archives related to Spain's accession and Portugal's accession
  • EuroparlTV's short film History: The Mediterranean Enlargement 1981-1986

1986, enlargement, european, communities, spain, portugal, acceded, european, communities, european, union, 1986, this, third, enlargement, communities, following, from, 1973, 1981, enlargements, their, accessions, considered, part, broader, mediterranean, enl. Spain and Portugal acceded to the European Communities now the European Union in 1986 This was the third enlargement of the Communities following on from the 1973 and 1981 enlargements Their accessions are considered to be a part of the broader Mediterranean enlargement of the European Union 1 2 EC members in 1986 New EC members admitted in 1986 Monument in Madrid marking Spain s accession to the ECMain article Accession Treaty of Spain to the European Economic Community Both countries had been under dictatorships until just over a decade prior to the accession with Spain under the military dictatorship of Francisco Franco and Portugal under the corporatist dictatorship of the Estado Novo This had meant that whilst both countries had previously had relationships with the Communities in some form or another they were ineligible to become members The mid 1970s brought the death of Franco in Spain and the Carnation Revolution in Portugal which rapidly pushed both countries towards democracy Membership talks began with both countries a few years later Spain and Portugal acceded to the Communities on 1 January 1986 3 The accession took place without any official ceremony other than the raising of the Spanish and Portuguese flags in Brussels after a period of more than six years of negotiations between the Communities and the two countries 4 The accession talks were particularly prolonged by concerns over the Spanish fishing fleet which was larger than the entire Community fleet put together as well as severe governmental turbulence in Portugal where several governments collapsed and one Prime Minister died in an aeroplane crash during the negotiations Some scholars at the time predicted that increased competition from Europe would lead to economic problems for Spain and Portugal however in the years since both countries economies have benefited overall from the accession The enlargement is also credited by some with helping to stabilise the fledgling democracies of both countries as well as speeding up the decolonisation of the Portuguese Empire whilst there is broadly consensus that membership played some role in these processes there remains debate as to whether membership was the deciding factor in these changes or whether it merely contributed Contents 1 History 1 1 Spain 1 1 1 Relations under Franco 1 1 2 The Spanish transition and applying for Community membership 1 1 3 Membership negotiations 1 2 Portugal 1 2 1 Relations under the Estado Novo 1 2 2 EC loans and application under democracy 1 2 3 Governmental turbulence 1 2 4 Internal political reactions 2 International reaction 2 1 United Kingdom and Gibraltar 2 2 Greek veto 3 Impact 3 1 Democratic transition 3 2 Acquis communautaire 3 3 International relations 3 4 Economic impact 4 See also 5 References 6 Notes 7 External linksHistory editSpain edit Main article Accession Treaty of Spain to the European Economic Community Relations under Franco edit Spain first applied for association with the European Economic Community EEC the general economic arm of the three European Communities on 10 February 1962 5 The country was ineligible for full membership as a direct consequence of its dictatorship whilst there was no specific provision in the treaty establishing the EEC requiring that Member States be democracies 6 the European Parliament made clear just months after the application that an undemocratic Spain would never have any relationship negotiated closer than a commercial treaty with further European integration in mind 7 8 The Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe passed a resolution by 70 votes to 31 in its 14th ordinary session in May 1962 calling for members of the EEC to examine the possibility of some form of economic agreement between Spain and the Community bearing in mind the constitutional changes that will be necessary before any form of political association can be contemplated 9 However the application caused some controversy a number of members of the European Parliament questioned whether the application was acceptable given Spain s dictatorship 10 11 With the question of association still unresolved by 1964 the head of the Spanish mission to the EEC sent another letter on 14 February renewing the request for association status 12 Talks were subsequently scheduled to begin in the autumn of that year 8 Eventually in 1967 the Council of the EEC approved a mandate for the commission to negotiate with Spain and a trade agreement was signed in June 1970 13 However this was a trade preference agreement as opposed to an association agreement this meant only reciprocity in trade concessions as opposed to the economic development assistance and the possibility of eventual full membership that was granted through association status to for instance Greece and Turkey 14 Discussions remained in the 1970s about what the future relationship between the EEC and Spain might look like after the formation of an EEC Spain joint committee 15 The Spanish transition and applying for Community membership edit See also Spanish transition to democracy nbsp Oreja and Suarez with Joop den Uyl the Prime Minister of the Netherlands in August 1977 following Spain s application Following the death of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco who had ruled over the country for 36 years and the beginnings of the Spanish transition to democracy rumours had been circulating for some time in 1977 about the possibility of a Spanish request for membership of the EEC 16 On 26 July the new democratic government of Spain led by Adolfo Suarez wrote three letters to the President of the Council of Ministers of the European Communities Henri Simonet each requesting the admission of Spain to each different European Community 17 These letters were hand delivered by the Foreign Minister of Spain Marcelino Oreja to the President of the European Commission Roy Jenkins in Brussels on 28 July 1977 18 19 At the time significant concerns were raised with regards to whether or not Spain would be accepted into the EEC Spanish press talked of a potential veto from France and Italy against its accession on the basis of the potential threat it would pose to their agricultural sectors 20 21 13 However more than a year after the application was made after extensive consultation and negotiation with existing Member States the European Commission published in November 1978 an official opinion on Spain s application for membership 22 The opinion recommended that membership negotiations begin but noted that the process to becoming a member of the EEC was likely to be a slow one citing both financial and bureaucratic barriers 23 Membership negotiations edit On 5 February 1979 negotiations were opened between Spain and the European Council the committee of leaders of the Member States of the European Communities Roy Jenkins declared during a speech at the opening of the negotiations that Spain is a part of Europe and Europe is incomplete without Spain 24 25 26 nbsp Plaque in the Royal Palace of Madrid marking the 12 June 1985 signing of the agreement that brought Spain into the EC An attempted coup d etat in Spain in February 1981 in which elements of the Spanish Civil Guard attempted to remove the democratically elected government from office represented a significant point of international attention during the membership negotiations The EEC was no exception to this expressing its concern about the unfolding events 27 The attempt was unsuccessful and following its failure the European Council met on 23 24 March 1981 It subsequently released a statement expressing its great satisfaction at the reaction of the King the government and the Spanish people faced by recent attacks against the democratic system of their country 28 Felipe Gonzalez the leader of the opposition Spanish Socialist Workers Party went on a tour of Western Europe in March of the same year to urge nations to admit Spain to the EEC as quickly as possible 29 the EEC was according to a Spanish diplomat speaking in 1982 seen as a synonym for democracy among the population 30 In spite of this the speed of the negotiations was not significantly increased by the events 31 A year later the Spanish Socialist Workers Party were elected into government following the 1982 Spanish general election making Gonzalez the Prime Minister Prior to the election Spanish negotiations with the Communities had reportedly stalled this was not only due to the coup attempt but also thanks to opposition from the French government over concerns related to the Common Agricultural Policy leading to greater competition from Spain 32 Gonzalez once again put emphasis on the EEC during his election campaign and at the same time downplayed the issue of Spanish membership of NATO which had been a controversial issue within the debate about opening Spain up to the world for a number of years 33 Concerns were also raised over the potential impact of Spain s accession in particular on the operation of the Common Fisheries Policy The Spanish fishing fleet was larger than the entire fleet of the existing Community members put together 34 which had presented an issue in a similar manner during the negotiation of an interim agreement on fishing between Spain and the Community 35 It was evident during the Spanish negotiations for admission that Spain had become more responsive to the fishing sector as a consequence of the high propensity of illegal fishing leading to fishermen mobilising as a socio occupational group 36 The Spanish Act of Accession eventually devoted fifty of its pages to fisheries related matters 37 around 10 of the entire treaty 38 Beginning to tire of the long negotiations by December 1983 the French government requested a deadline be imposed on the accession talks proposing 30 September 1984 as the date 39 The French government continued applying pressure in favour of this deadline into 1984 40 and it was agreed to by the Member States at the March 1984 Brussels Summit of the European Council 41 42 However the agreed deadline was not met with questions over fishing agriculture and steel still remaining by the end of September and more negotiations scheduled beyond the deadline 43 At the end of October 1984 a commitment was made that Spain and Portugal would join the Communities on 1 January 1986 although there remained difficulties still in a number of areas of the negotiations 44 This commitment was confirmed by a vote at the European Council summit on 3 December 1984 so long as final negotiations were successful 45 Portugal edit Relations under the Estado Novo edit See also History of Portugal Socio economic evolution In July 1959 just over a year after the EEC was established the government of Portugal began the process of establishing a diplomatic mission to it and to Euratom the same month 46 47 However Portugal considered its multi continental structure in reference to its many overseas colonies to be incompatible with EEC membership even had it wished to join its contemporary dictatorship would have made an accession difficult to impossible 48 In spite of these factors Portugal was a founding member of the European Free Trade Association EFTA which was initially aimed to compete with the EEC as a European common economic zone 49 EFTA constituting something closer to a pure free trade zone than the EEC was a more palatable prospect at the time for Portugal than taking on the full rules and regulations of the EEC 50 At the time of the organisation s foundation in 1960 Portugal was still under the Estado Novo corporatist dictatorship led by Antonio de Oliveira Salazar a year later the government of Portugal published a report decrying the decision taken by members of the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation to establish the EEC without consulting their partners in the Organisation and saying that The Portuguese Government is once again convinced that the spirit of understanding and solidarity that underpinned the establishment and operation of the European Free Trade Association will prevail 51 A Portuguese government report completed at the start of 1962 acknowledged that seeking entry as a member of the EEC would have been unlikely to end in success and suggested that an application for associate status might have been a better option 48 A few months later in April 1962 the Portuguese Ambassador to Brussels was instructed to open negotiations with the EEC to move towards this goal in spite of potential hostilities due to disapproval of the basic principles of contemporary Portuguese government policy 52 However the Portuguese government did not clarify what type of negotiations were being asked for or what the future relationship they envisaged looked like 53 There was also significant international opposition to any meaningful agreement being made with Portugal as a consequence of the country s authoritarian regime with the General Secretary of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions intervening in June saying We remain convinced that the Members of the Council of Ministers will not permit countries subjected to a regime like the Portuguese government of today to enter a community whose primary reason to exist is to strengthen the free world 54 The 1962 negotiations were later postponed indefinitely 55 Portugal once again looked to open negotiations with the EEC in 1969 55 These negotiations were more fruitful and eventually culminated in a trade agreement between the EEC and Portugal 56 57 albeit one that came at the same time as the EEC were negotiating free trade agreements with all Member States of EFTA 58 49 Diplomatic efforts towards Portuguese membership of the EEC were restarted in the early 1970s still during the time of the Estado Novo dictatorship but with Marcelo Caetano having assumed the office of Prime Minister after Salazar s death 59 Exploratory talks began in confidence on 7 January 1971 60 with Caetano s attitude to Portuguese EEC relations being described as pragmatic seeing that Europe would continue to be incredibly important for the country as their main trading partner 53 On 19 December 1972 the EEC and the Portuguese government concluded an agreement significantly reducing tariffs on imports in trade between the two 61 This was the last move towards Europe on the part of Portugal before the fall of the Estado Novo regime 53 EC loans and application under democracy edit nbsp Soares right in the Netherlands on 9 March 1977 just weeks before the Portuguese application Following the Carnation Revolution of 1974 and the first democratic elections in 1975 the new Portuguese government started to take greater steps towards European integration Over the course of the early 1970s the European Investment Bank loaned millions of units of account a pre Euro European system of monetary exchange without preference to a single currency to Portugal with the objective of giving its fullest support to Portugal s efforts to strengthen democracy and promote social and economic progress 62 In June 1976 the exchange rate for units of account to US dollars meant the amount loaned at the time UA 70 million was worth 79 1 million 63 equivalent to 330 000 000 in 2023 The first democratically elected government of Portugal spoke of its programme as one that intends that Portugal be present in the common effort of democratic European countries in the political economic social and cultural transformation of the old continent 64 These efforts bore their first fruits in September 1976 with the entrance of Portugal into the Council of Europe 65 66 In 1977 just before Portugal made its formal application to join the Communities Mario Soares the Prime Minister of Portugal and his Foreign Minister both went on a tour of European capitals attempting to gather preliminary support for his country s accession 67 68 Shortly afterwards on 28 March Portugal made their formal application to join the European Communities 69 70 with a series of three letters written by Soares to David Owen the President of the council 71 The Portuguese government at the time claimed that the application was not the decision of a government but rather the decision of a people 67 Just over a year after the application was made on 19 May 1978 the Commission issued a positive opinion on the Portuguese application for membership following which membership negotiations were opened 72 Although the opinion recommended that the Portuguese application be considered it also highlighted significant dangers inherent to a Portuguese accession in the country s state at the time noting that profound social and economic reforms would be required before admission could be successful 73 Governmental turbulence edit In the immediate months following the opening of negotiations there was some concern expressed over the level of support within the Portuguese populace for membership of the Communities with the French newspaper Le Monde reporting that half of the population of Lisbon were unaware of what the Common Market was rising to 72 in Porto 74 Furthermore at the end of 1979 after the government collapsed several times Parliament was dissolved and fresh elections were called leading to the election of a new Prime Minister Francisco de Sa Carneiro 75 However after having been in office for only a year Carneiro died in the 1980 Camarate air crash 76 77 He was replaced as Prime Minister by Francisco Pinto Balsemao whose government highlighted in their program concerns over negative economic and social consequences resulting from Community regulations that suppose a different stage of structural evolution in a Member State 78 During Balsemao s government a new Transitional Protocol was agreed between the EEC and Portugal adjusting some of the tariffs applicable to trade between the two with a view to the accession of the Portuguese Republic to the Communities 79 In 1983 amid a storm of resignations Balsemao s government too collapsed and the 1983 Portuguese legislative election was called 80 77 The elections led to the return of the Socialist Party and consequently the return of Mario Soares as Prime Minister However with insufficient support in the Portuguese Assembly Soares was forced to form a coalition with Carneiro s party the Social Democratic Party 81 The new coalition s program stated that accession to the EEC in good time and under the right conditions is the top priority of Portuguese economic and foreign policy 82 Internal political reactions edit After 23 meetings of negotiations between ministers in Portugal and the Communities on 24 October 1984 a joint statement was signed in Dublin between Soares Garret FitzGerald the president of the European Council and Lorenzo Natali the Vice President of the commission reaffirming the objective of Portugal joining the Community on 1 January 1986 83 84 In debates in the Portuguese Assembly the Socialist Party the Social Democratic Party and the Independent Social Democratic Association all expressed their agreement with the accession arrangements 85 The planned entrance was not entirely without opposition some members of the Portuguese Democratic Movement which had been an important force in Portuguese politics at the time claimed the accession was a myth that served as an alibi for the Portuguese government to avoid being confronted with the disastrous economic and social consequences of its policy 86 whilst the Portuguese Communist Party PCP member Carlos Carvalhas claimed the EEC were ready to sacrifice the interests of other countries 87 The Communist led union Intersindical stood with the PCP who still exist today in opposing EEC membership on the grounds of what they considered to be loss of economic control that it would cause 88 However the Communist Party was the only Portuguese political party at the time consistently opposed to EEC membership 89 and they began to receive fewer and fewer votes starting in the mid 1980s around the time of accession 90 International reaction editUnited Kingdom and Gibraltar edit See also Gibraltar Spain border History The status of the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar was a significant sticking point in the negotiations for Spain s accession The Spanish Socialist Workers Party were elected into government in 1982 on a manifesto including both EEC membership and a return of the territory to Spain 91 Following the election the Spanish government re opened the border with Gibraltar to pedestrians on humanitarian grounds which laid the foundation for further negotiations with the United Kingdom although no other types of traffic were permitted through 92 These negotiations continued for some time with one suggestion being that the territory could be turned into a NATO military base with shared sovereignty as a consequence 93 The negotiations surrounding the status of Gibraltar were described at the time by Fernando Moran the Spanish foreign minister as the most decisive and delicate moment of Spain s accession negotiations 94 The government of the United Kingdom at the time declared themselves publicly to be in favour of Portugal and Spain joining the Communities 95 with the Minister of State for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office saying that the country had been a staunch supporter of the accession 96 However Margaret Thatcher the British Prime Minister stated in 1983 that Spain could not accede to the Communities until the restrictions on the border between Spain and Gibraltar are lifted 97 Lord Trefgarne an undersecretary of state at the time even went so far as to say that the restrictions were incompatible with the obligations of Spain as a member of the EEC 98 Thatcher s government s insistence on a complete re opening of the border prior to EEC entry angered the Spanish government of the time 99 however they also said that they would be prepared to allow vehicular and other crossings rather than just those on foot 100 After even further protracted negotiations the border was fully reopened on 5 February 1985 101 Greek veto edit From 1982 onwards Greece had been trying to secure approval by the European Council for the Integrated Mediterranean Programmes IMPs a series of financial aid measures for disadvantaged regions of the Communities 102 Having had little success and with the idea still under consideration by the Council several years later 102 Greece threatened to veto the accessions of Spain and Portugal 103 The veto was based on Greece s claims that its economy would not be able to cope with more economically weak Member States joining without receiving agricultural subsidies for its poorest regions that had not yet been approved 104 In late 1984 Andreas Papandreou the Prime Minister of Greece formally confirmed that the only blocker for Greek approval of the accessions was the availability of financial subsidy through the IMPs 105 This drew criticism from other Member States who argued that Greek financial demands to the Communities should not affect the accession of new members 102 and led to doubts from Gaston Thorn the President of the commission that completing the agreements would be possible for an accession date of 1 January 1986 106 Negotiations continued on into 1985 and on 29 May the Italian Minister for Foreign Affairs Giulio Andreotti in conjunction with Spain s Fernando Moran and the Portuguese Finance Minister Ernani Lopes announced that an agreement had been reached 107 Some parts of the IMPs would be implemented thereby increasing EEC funding to Greece 104 consequentially Greece dropped its reservations and Portugal and Spain would enter the Europe of Twelve on 1 January 1986 108 In total Greece received US 2 000 000 000 in additional aid as a consequence of the negotiations 104 107 equivalent to 5 700 000 000 in 2023 Impact editData in the table is as of 1986 unless otherwise stated Member countries Capital Population Area km2 Population per km2 GDP billion US GDP per capita US Languages note 1 nbsp Portugal Lisbon 10 030 621 109 92 389 110 108 57 38 746 111 3 863 Portuguese nbsp Spain Madrid 38 531 195 109 504 782 110 76 33 251 321 112 6 523 Spanish Accession countries 48 561 816 597 171 81 32 290 067 5 973 15 2 Existing members 273 271 000 110 note 2 1 664 740 110 164 15 2 187 113 note 3 8 003 04 7 114 EU12 after accessions 321 832 816 2 261 911 142 28 2 477 067 7 696 75 9 38 Democratic transition edit Membership of the Communities is widely seen as having assisted the transitions to democracy of Spain and Portugal however there is some debate as to what extent Community membership is responsible for this 115 The prerequisite that a state should be a democracy before joining the Communities has been described as a motivating factor for democratisation and such a requirement has been suggested for agreements such as the North American Free Trade Agreement as a result 116 Eurobarometer surveys between 1985 and 1997 found a significant majority of Portuguese citizens felt that EU membership had benefited their country this peaked at 82 of the population in 1991 before falling to a low of 67 in 1997 117 Acquis communautaire edit Special arrangements agreed for Spain and Portugal as new EEC members meant that whilst in principle they were subject to the acquis communautaire of the Common Fisheries Policy they were not fully integrated into it for many years 37 It has also been argued that the acquis on environmental policy imposed significant costs on accession countries compliance pressure and capacity building assistance from the Communities later the EU has been described as necessary but not sufficient alone to foster successful environmental governance in the accession countries 118 However other scholars have argued that the eventual benefit from the acquis has outweighed this and pointed out that Spain has come to ardently insist on new EU members taking up the entire acquis 119 International relations edit Shortly after formally joining in 1986 both Spain and Portugal agreed to proposed changes to the Treaty of Rome which limited individual countries abilities to veto proposed legislation affecting tariffs and trade and committed to a common foreign policy for Community Member States 120 They also expressed themselves to be in favour of a doubling of the research budget of the EEC over a period of 5 years 121 The accession of Portugal to the European Communities also had an impact on the decolonisation of Portuguese colonies in Africa and on Europe Africa relations consequently Whilst the acquis communautaire itself had been weak dominated only by the European Political Cooperation the acquis politique was very much in favour of decolonisation 122 a process which Portugal was pushed to adopt in order to join the Communities although there is debate as to whether the planned accession was the primary cause 123 124 Economic impact edit The accession led to significant benefits for both in terms of economic stability and strength 125 and the average per capita income of Portuguese and Spanish citizens grew significantly reaching 74 and 83 respectively of the EU average by 2003 116 Structural funds offered by European Community membership were of particular importance in easing pressure on the countries economies especially following the Single European Act reforms that doubled the amount of structural funds available between 1988 and 1993 126 In Portugal these funds were invested primarily in road infrastructure public buildings and urban renewal indirectly creating many new jobs in the construction industry which led to a significant if small in absolute terms increase in unskilled or low skilled migration to the country 127 The dismantling of tariff barriers subsequent to both countries accessions led some scholars to predict the collapse of industry in the two countries a columnist of the Harvard International Review Anne Robinson predicted both Spain s and Portugal s generally under productive and inefficient industries will collapse creating profitable new markets for exporters in Europe s modernised north 128 Restrictive administrative practices in Spain however are noted as having penalised products from abroad placing a preference on locally produced ones 129 Concerns were also expressed over potential impacts of the Common Agricultural Policy on the Portuguese farming industry especially with regard to pushes for afforestation and extensification although these were additionally noted to have benefits for some industries including in logging and paper production 130 See also edit1973 enlargement of the European Communities 1981 enlargement of the European Communities 1995 enlargement of the European Union 2004 enlargement of the European Union 2007 enlargement of the European Union 2013 enlargement of the European UnionReferences edit Preston Christopher 1995 Obstacles to EU Enlargement The Classical 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de Almeida Pedro 10 January 2014 Portuguese elites and European integration In Ferreira Pereira Laura C ed Portugal in the European Union assessing twenty five years of integration experience London Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 81544 0 OCLC 868282332 Lobo Marina Costa Magalhaes Pedro C 1 March 2011 Room for Manoeuvre Euroscepticism in the Portuguese Parties and Electorate 1976 2005 South European Society and Politics 16 1 90 doi 10 1080 13608740903432375 ISSN 1360 8746 S2CID 153600380 Lancaster Thomas D Taulbee James L 1985 Britain Spain and the Gibraltar question The Journal of Commonwealth amp Comparative Politics 23 3 251 266 doi 10 1080 14662048508447480 ISSN 0306 3631 Spain Ends 13 Year Gibraltar Blockade The New York Times UPI 15 December 1982 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Markham James 21 March 1981 Spaniards uneasy in wake of coup Eau Claire Leader Telegram New York Times News Service Retrieved 20 July 2020 via NewspaperArchive Espana CEE en el momento mas delicado Spain EEC in the most delicate moment El Pais in Spanish 21 July 1983 ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Sir Geoffrey Howe Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs 4 December 1985 European Communities Spanish and Portuguese Accession Bill Parliamentary Debates Hansard Vol 88 Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 313 Retrieved 20 May 2020 Baroness Young Minister of State Foreign and Commonwealth Office 19 November 1985 European Communities Spanish and Portuguese Accession Bill Parliamentary Debates Hansard Vol 468 Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Lords col 497 Retrieved 20 May 2020 Margaret Thatcher Prime Minister 19 July 1983 Gibraltar Parliamentary Debates Hansard Vol 46 Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 175 176 Retrieved 20 May 2020 Barrio Antonio Marquina January 1986 NATO the EEC Gibraltar North Africa Overlapping issues for Spain The International Spectator 21 1 45 doi 10 1080 03932728608456580 ISSN 0393 2729 Naldi Gino J May 1984 The Gibraltar Dispute and Some Possible Solutions Netherlands International Law Review 31 1 31 58 doi 10 1017 S0165070X00013097 ISSN 1741 6191 Roldan Juan 21 July 1983 El Gobierno presentara al Reino Unido nuevas iniciativas sobre Gibraltar en septiembre The Government will present the United Kingdom with new initiatives on Gibraltar in September El Pais in Spanish ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Spain Gibraltar Open Gate After 16 Years The Times Recorder Associated Press 5 February 1985 a b c Smyrl Marc E 1998 When and How Do the Commission s Preferences Matter JCMS Journal of Common Market Studies 36 1 84 doi 10 1111 1468 5965 00098 ISSN 1468 5965 Gregos mantem veto contra alargamento Diario de Lisboa in Portuguese 28 March 1985 Retrieved 16 October 2019 a b c Miguel Santos Carrapatoso 20 February 2015 1985 Quando a Grecia exigiu mais dinheiro para aceitar Portugal na CEE Observador in Portuguese Archived from the original on 16 October 2019 Retrieved 16 October 2019 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2003 Some Lessons from the Fifteenth Anniversary of the Accession of Portugal and Spain to the European Union South European Society and Politics 8 1 2 1 30 doi 10 1080 13608740808539641 ISSN 1360 8746 S2CID 154984774 Lobo Marina Costa 1 March 2003 Portuguese Attitudes Towards EU Membership Social and Political Perspectives South European Society and Politics 8 1 2 97 118 doi 10 1080 13608740808539645 ISSN 1360 8746 S2CID 219698025 Borzel Tanja A 2009 After Accession Escaping the Low Capacity Trap Coping with accession to the European Union new modes of environmental governance Borzel Tanja A 1970 Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 57551 6 OCLC 308174719 Granell Francesc 2012 The Impact of EU Membership on the Economic Governance of Spain PDF Espai de Recerca en Economia Working Papers in Economics Universitat de Barcelona Archived PDF from the original on 5 December 2017 Retrieved 28 May 2020 via CORE Burns Robert 12 January 1986 Group struggles to close hi tech gap with U S Panama City News Herald Associated Press pp 50 53 Retrieved 22 May 2020 Continued on page 53 Dickson David 1987 EEC Uniting to Meet High Tech s Challenge Science 237 4819 1103 1104 Bibcode 1987Sci 237 1103D doi 10 1126 science 237 4819 1103 ISSN 0036 8075 JSTOR 1699494 PMID 17801624 Raimundo Antonio 23 May 2013 The Europeanisation of foreign policy An assessment of the EU impact on Portugal s post colonial relations in Sub Saharan Africa European Integration Online Papers 2013 001 doi 10 1695 2013001 ISSN 1027 5193 Teixeira Nuno Severiano Pinto Antonio Costa 2012 The Europeanization of Portuguese democracy Boulder Colo Social Science Monographs ISBN 978 0 88033 946 9 OCLC 788995939 Nishiwaki Yasuhiro 2012 ポルトガルのEEC加盟申請 民主化 脱植民地化プロセスとの交錯 Portugal s Application to the EEC Intertwine with the Democratization and Decolonization Processes International Relations in Japanese 2012 168 doi 10 11375 kokusaiseiji 168 30 via J STAGE Balmaseda Manuel Sebastian Miguel 1 March 2003 Spain in the EU Fifteen Years May Not Be Enough South European Society and Politics 8 1 2 195 230 doi 10 1080 13608740808539649 ISSN 1360 8746 S2CID 155754024 Soares Antonio Goucha 1 December 2007 Portugal and the European Union The ups and downs in 20 years of membership Perspectives on European Politics and Society 8 4 460 475 doi 10 1080 15705850701640835 hdl 10400 5 26509 ISSN 1570 5854 S2CID 153728710 Baganha Maria I 2009 Fassmann Heinz Reeger Ursula Sievers Wiebke eds Portugal Statistics and Reality Concepts and Measurements of Migration in Europe Amsterdam University Press pp 263 280 ISBN 978 90 8964 052 9 JSTOR j ctt46n2qg 17 Robinson Anne 1987 Growing Pains in the EEC Harvard International Review 9 2 40 48 ISSN 0739 1854 JSTOR 42759941 Royo Sebastian 2010 Portugal and Spain in the EU paths of economic divergence 2000 2007 Analise Social 45 195 209 254 ISSN 0003 2573 JSTOR 41012796 Moreira Manuel Belo 1 December 1989 The crisis of Portugese sic agriculture in relation to the EEC challenge Agriculture and Human Values 6 1 70 81 doi 10 1007 BF02219423 ISSN 1572 8366 S2CID 154189903 Notes edit Includes only national languages several Member States have various co official languages including Spain Calculated by summing the 1986 mid year estimates for the existing members of the Communities as of 1986 from the UN report World Bank data is insufficient for this purpose as it appears to make no distinction between West Germany and East Germany in its historical data The data here is an approximate estimate based on the latest available GNP data presented in the CIA World Factbook 1986 edition External links editUniversity of Pittsburgh s Archive of European Integration with relevant Bulletins of the European Communities and supplements Digital Research in European Studies archives related to Spain s accession and Portugal s accession EuroparlTV s short film History The Mediterranean Enlargement 1981 1986 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1986 enlargement of the European Communities amp oldid 1219786489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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