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Transformations of the Papacy’s Relation towards the Project of European Integration: from Pius XII to Benedict XVI

Abstract

This article deals with the European integration policy of the Holy See from the 1950s until the resignation of Benedict XVI at the beginning of 2013. The goal of the study is to describe the integration policies of individual popes in the context of political science theories. In the first half of the study we will briefly introduce the major typologies of political science for the study of integration policies of political parties. From the list of the existing approaches, we choose the typology of Petr Kaniok as the most appropriate for this study. In the second half of the study, individual popes are classified according to the framework of Kaniok’s typology. The goal of the study is not only to investigate the major moves in the integration policy of the Holy See, but also to utilize a theoretical approach traditionally used for the study of political parties on the issue of the Holy See.

Keywords

Holy See, European integration, Papacy, Vatican, Roman Catholic Church, federalism, intergovernmentalism

PDF Research Article (Czech)

Author Biography

Petr Žák

Born in 1987, he studied political science and European studies at Palacký University in Olomouc, where he is also pursuing a doctoral program. His dissertation focuses on the relationship between the Holy See and the Roman Catholic Church with European integration. More broadly, he explores the role of the papacy in the 20th century and the relationship between the state and the church during the First Czechoslovak Republic.

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