Abstract

Second World War Europe was no longer either physically or ideologically divided. The Soviet president, Mikhail Gorbachev, had referred to the idea of a 'common European home' since 1986, and by 1989 President George Bush of the United States was talking about a 'Europe whole and free/ Both leaders seemed agreed that the European Community (eg) lay at the very heart of this 'new' Europe but neither appeared to appreciate the tremendous challenge that it presented and will continue to present to the eg. This article examines the nature of that challenge and the ways in which the Community might meet it after the planned completion of its Single Market Programme (smp) in 1992. In the first part of the article we hope to answer the question 'what kind of European Community?' by referring to the impact of the Single Market Programme, to the Maastricht agreement

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