Abstract

The Stresa Conference of 1958, though it did not settle differences between the six original Member States of the European Economic Community, was regarded as significant at the time. This paper recalls the main issues then discussed, and reflects on the subsequent development of the Common Agricultural Policy. It suggests that the challenge of that time--integration among Western European countries--has its parallel today in the opening-up of Eastern Europe. Copyright 1994 by Oxford University Press.

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