Sommarjobb
Swiping my
key card, I find myself entirely alone at work, the usual buzz of students and
colleagues replaced only by the hum of the ventilation. Picking up the ninth
edition of Policy-making in the European Union, I am reminded that it
was one of the books that first sparked my interest in political science at the
turn of the millennium. I especially remember the opening chapters on
integration theory, how the world still seemed to be coming together, and how
cooperation in one domain could spill over into others.
Preparing slides for September, which I already know will be an exceedingly busy month with three courses starting at the same time and a conference in Stockholm. With the election on 13 September, we will also know a little
more about what kind of country Sweden has become.
Walking to
work this morning, I stopped in front of the Sweden Democrats' election
posters, with their faux nostalgia and celebration of fossil-fuelled hedonism.
Much as I have come to reject traditional environmentalism for its lack of
global imagination, moments like that very clearly remind me where I stand. A
renewed mandate for the Tidö parties would, I fear, legitimize our basest instincts
and further accelerate the erosion of democracy itself.



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