Książki/rozdziały (WNPiDz)
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Browsing Książki/rozdziały (WNPiDz) by Author "Brańka, Tomasz"
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Item Cross-border Universities as a Field of Europeanization of Higher Eduction in the EU(2016) Jańczak, Jarosław; Przybylska-Maszner, Beata; Musiał-Karg, Magdalena; Brańka, TomaszItem Getting Europe back to work. Crisis (re)production and crisis overcoming in Europe(Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, 2019) Brańka, Tomasz; Skrzypczyńska, JoannaThe aim of this publication is to discuss the current determinants generating economic growth in the European Union, which is still a challenge in the post-crisis context. It has been investigated globally, continentally and regionally. At the same time, the key question is whether this economic growth is compatible with the social dimension and social values, which is one of the main considerations of young Europeans, who were most adversely affected by the crisis.Item NEETs, North South Divergence and Economic Security in the Euro Area in the Aftermath of the Crisis(Adam Mickiewicz University, 2019) Szymanowski, Rafał; Skrzypczyńska, Joanna; Brańka, TomaszThe euro was intended to bring more economic and political convergence between European countries. This was the main promise of the French Monetarists during the founding debate on European monetary integration, as well as European leaders who decided to permanently fix exchange rates and introduce the euro. Moving forward on the path towards “ever closer union” was the greatest hope of both the architects of the common currency and its political supporters. However, as a result of the eurozone crisis, European countries actually diverged from each other. The main argument of this paper is straightforward: the financial and banking crisis in the euro area gave rise to the dangerous divide between the core “surplus” countries in the north and peripheral “deficit” countries in the south. In this paper, I examine this divergence by looking at one crucial indicator: the number of young people who are unemployed and inactive (NEET) in the northern and southern countries of the eurozone, before and after the financial crisis.