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Flag of the European Union

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style="font-size: larger;" | European Union
Motto:
(Latin for "United in diversity")
Anthem: Ode to Joy (orchestral)
EU institution sites Brussels (CoEU, EC, and EP)
Luxembourg (ECoJ and ECoA)
Strasbourg (2nd EP)
Monetary authority European Central Bank
Administrative centre Brussels (de facto capital)
Largest cities Berlin, London, Madrid, Paris, Rome (in alphabetical order)
Member states 25 member states
Official languages 20 official languages
Presidencies
European Council Matti Vanhanen
Council of the EU Finland
European Commission José Manuel Durão Barroso
European Parliament Josep Borrell Fontelles
History
Europe Day May 9, 1950
Formation as EEC
 - Signed
 - Enforced
Treaty of Rome
 - March 25, 1957
 - January 1, 1958
Formation as EU
 - Signed
 - Enforced
Maastricht Treaty
 - February 7, 1992
 - November 1, 1993
Statistics
Area
 - Total
7th if ranked
3,976,372 km²
Population
 - Total (2006)
 - Density
3rd if ranked
457,514,494
115.6 people/km²
GDP (PPP, 2005)
 - Total
 - Per capita
1st if ranked
$12,427,413 million
$28,100
HDI (2003) 0.922 (est.) (22nd if ranked) – high
Other information
Currencies Euro (EUR or €)
Time zone UTC 0 to +2
Internet TLD .eu
Calling codes Not standardized
Official Website http://europa.eu/
See other official names
"The symbols of the EU", Europa.
Only for Eurozone members and EU institutions
Not de jure - Brussels is unofficialy referred to as The Capital of the European Union because it is the hub of EU institutions: it hosts the European Commission, the European Council, and the European Parliament.
If counted as a single unit.
Total: According to IMF Estimations & Reports for 2005; Per capita: According to the CIA World Factbook *.
Estimated using members' HDI, and weighted by estimated current population.
Would be 9th if member states were not counted.
+1 to +3 during DST; French overseas départements, UTC −4 to +4
Plans for a EU-wide +3 prefix were abandoned. The European Telephony Numbering Space, +388 3 is somewhat similar. Current members' codes begin with either +3 or +4.

The European Union (EU) is an intergovernmental and supranational union of 25 member states. The European Union was established under that name in 1992 by the Treaty on European Union (the Maastricht Treaty). However, many aspects of the Union existed before that date through a series of predecessor relationships, dating back to 1951. "Panorama of the European Union", Europa. Retrieved 20 May 2006.

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Issues :: Society and Culture
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BBC News | UK | World Edition

UK Iraq hostage 'killed himself'
Sat, 19 Jul 2008 22:49:13 -0000
One of the five UK hostages held captive in Iraq has killed himself, a video given to a newspaper claims.
Surgeons could earn pay bonuses
Sun, 20 Jul 2008 01:28:27 -0000
Surgeons could earn bonuses for operations under plans being considered by the UK's largest hospital trust.
UK 'must check' US torture denial
Sat, 19 Jul 2008 23:01:29 -0000
The British government should no longer rely on US assurances it does not use torture, a parliamentary report says.
Teenager falls 30ft from window
Sun, 20 Jul 2008 03:00:22 -0000
A schoolgirl from south London was seriously hurt when she fell 30ft from her hotel window in Venice, according to reports.
Lambeth Conference due to begin
Sun, 20 Jul 2008 02:37:41 -0000
Hundreds of Anglican bishops will attend a special service for the official opening of the Lambeth Conference.
Autism parents 'infection risk'
Sat, 19 Jul 2008 23:29:32 -0000
Caring for children with problems such as autism or Down's syndrome may weaken parents' immune systems.

The Economist: Britain

Things can only get worse
Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:29:20 -0000
As the economic pain intensifies there will be a political price to payFIVE years ago Mervyn King, the newly appointed governor of the Bank of England, gave warning that the "nice" decade would be followed by something less wholesome. Now starting his second term of office this month, Britain's leading central banker looks more prescient than ever. But even he surely did not expect that the "non-inflationary consistently expansionary" era would turn quite this sour.As the film "Mamma Mia!" evokes nostalgia for the 1970s, more ominous echoes of that stagflationary decade are ringing louder and louder. The economy looks set to slip into a recession as the housing market slides and the banking trauma refuses to end. Yet at the same time inflation is rising inexorably higher. This toxic combination has been described as "stagflation-lite"; the "lite" seems ever less appropriate. ...
The high price of free accounts
Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:29:20 -0000
The competition watchdog's challenge may be more bark than biteAMID the gloom of a faltering economy and a slumping housing market, Britain's banks, with their supervisors in hot pursuit, have been stumbling from one crisis to another. Having written off billions of pounds on the value of exotic credit products, and then tapped shareholders for billions more to rebuild strained balance sheets, banks have been bracing themselves for the next shoe to drop. Most expected it to come in the form of writedowns on bad loans in their traditional banking business. Some analysts reckon these may total as much as GBP19 billion, if defaults rise to levels last seen in the previous downturn in the early 1990s. Yet trouble, as so often happens, has come from an unexpected direction. ...
No IVF please, we?re British
Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:29:20 -0000
Test-tube babies are rare in the country where the first was born"BABY of the century" ran the front-page headline of the Daily Express on July 11th, 1978. The paper promised the story of Lesley Brown, who was barricaded inside Oldham and District General Hospital, near Manchester, waiting to give birth. The world's press was camped outside; the front doors locked and staff forced to sneak in and out via a side entrance. Patrick Steptoe and Robert Edwards, the obstetrician and physiologist who had, nine months before, taken an egg from one of Mrs Brown's ovaries under anaesthetic and fertilised it in vitro with her husband's sperm, were in hiding. It had been, said Time magazine after Mrs Brown was delivered of a daughter on July 25th, "the most awaited birth in perhaps 2,000 years".Thirty years after Louise Brown was born, "test-tube babies" are commonplace. Around the world 3.5m have been born and at least 200,000 more join them each year. Yet infertile people in the country where it all began are among the least likely in the rich world to receive what is now a standard treatment for their condition. Just under 700 attempts at in vitro fertilisation (IVF) are carried out per million Britons each year, one of the lowest rates in Europe. The 11,262 IVF babies born in Britain in 2005, the latest year for which figures are available, were just 1.6% of all births, compared with rates of 3-3.5% in the Nordic countries (see chart). ...
More haste, less speed
Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:29:20 -0000
Worries about the new planning system could well turn into protestsAN INSIGHT often credited to Gordon Brown is that voters only notice a political message when it is reduced to a pithy soundbite and repeated endlessly. "Working hard for hard-working families" was a familiar trope during his decade as chancellor of the exchequer, as was the promise of "no return to boom and bust". Nowadays the prime minister is most likely to be heard asserting his willingness, and the Conservative Party's reluctance, to make "tough, long term decisions".In few policy areas does this self-professed capacity to do what is unpopular but necessary seem more apt than in planning, always a fraught issue in a crowded island with a reverence for the countryside. On July 16th, the House of Lords completed its second reading of a controversial government bill designed to speed up approval for infrastructure projects, such as power stations and motorways. Currently, local councils consider most planning applications, and ministers "call in" particularly contentious ones. A prolonged public inquiry often results. The new system will shift decision-making power to an independent Infrastructure Planning Commission (IPC), relegating the government's role to setting out its vision for different types of infrastructure in a series of national policy statements. ...
Great expectations, no hope
Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:29:20 -0000
A hotly anticipated by-election that may well change nothingTHE east ends of Britain's big cities have a special, mythical place in the national imagination. They are urban frontiers: gritty, sometimes lawless and eventful. History--trade unionism; radicalism; the temperance movement; industrial revolution; immigrant strife and striving--is packed into them as tightly as their inhabitants are, or, in the case of Glasgow, were. In Glasgow's ruined east end, whole roads are vacant and vandalised; grotty pubs and discount stores dominate the grey high streets.The Westminster by-election on July 24th in Glasgow East--one of the most deprived constituencies in Britain, and hitherto one of Labour's safest seats--has been widely billed as another catalytic east-end drama: a pivotal episode in the rise of Scottish nationalism, a prime minister's fall and the confrontation of entrenched social ills. It is likely to disappoint on all three fronts. ...
Summer of discontent
Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:29:20 -0000
A new wave of strikes stirs memories of the 1970sFOR the schoolchildren, it was as if the summer holidays had come a few days early. For their parents, though, the strike by school-support staff--dinner ladies, teaching assistants and the like--as well as hundreds of thousands of other local-government workers on July 16th and 17th was less cause for celebration. Besides having to find babysitters or take the day off work, they also had to deal with unemptied bins and closed (or undermanned) town halls. For Labour ministers, it was a worrying portent of further confrontation with the unions that fund the party.Council workers are unhappy with the 2.45% pay rise offered to them by town halls, arguing that, with retail-price inflation at 4.6%, the deal represents a wage cut in real terms. Both sides are appealing to public opinion. The trade unions say that many of the workers in question are poorly paid and often work part-time. The councils retort that any increases above 2.45% would require either higher taxes or cuts in public services. ...

 
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BBC News - In Depth: Inside Europe - Ongoing collection of news and views plus background briefings, country profiles, history and online audio programmes. Includes issues of enlargement and an EU constitution.
Meta Description: [ Visit BBC News for up-to-the-minute news, breaking news, video, audio and feature stories. BBC News provides trusted World and UK news as well as local and regional perspectives. Also entertainment, business, science, technology and health news. ]

Britain in Europe - Campaign for greater integration between Britain and the European Union includes pro-EU articles and information advocating adoption of the euro as Britain's currency.

Campaign Against Euro Federalism - A trade union-based campaign opposing the EU from the viewpoint of the democratic left.

Campaign for an Independent Britain (CIB) - Coalition group which seeks the UK's withdrawal from the EU, and specifically the repeal of the European Communities Act of 1972 under which EU directives take precedence over UK law.

Democracy Movement - A non-party campaign to keep the pound and stop the European Superstate; formed from Sir James Goldsmith's Referendum Party and the Euro Information Campaign.
Meta Description: [ Set up to stop the British Government from abolishing the Pound. A voice for those who do not want to be citizens of an EU superstate. ]

Euro-Links Search Engine - Directory of web sites pro and anti European federalization.
Meta Description: [ Euro-sceptic.org - linking the groups, organizations, people and web sites critical of European federalization ]

Euroseptic.co.uk - Eurosceptic humour, graphics and icons, and merchandise.
Meta Description: [ Eurosceptic humour - Using designs, on t-shirts and just about anything else, to question the wisdom of the Euro ]

Guardian Unlimited Politics Special Report: Britain and the EU - Ongoing coverage focuses on the political issues with the European Union and the UK. Includes news, comment and analysis plus speeches, official texts and audio clips.

Guardian Unlimited Special Report: European Union - Ongoing coverage with news, comment and analysis about the European Union itself and its issues, policies and future. Includes links to official documents, European government and media sites.

Spiked Politics - Issues: The EU - Collection of archived columns about European Union and euro issues.
Meta Description: [ It's politics, Jim, but not as we know it. In a UK election where nobody wants to talk about politics, spiked-politics asks the questions politicians and their friendly critics want to avoid. ]

The European Movement - All-party movement campaigning for the European Union to become more democratic and effective, and for Britain to play a full role within it.

The European Union Committee of the UK House of Lords - Scrutinises and produces reports on European Legislation: background to the Committee, copies of evidence and reports.

500 The Magna Carta Society - Promotion of the rights and freedoms of the British subjects, assured for all time by the Magna Carta, 'proves' all EU Law illegal in Britain.
Meta Description: [ Dedicated to restoring the British Constitution and bringing to trial those who have illegally exceeded their authority and conspired with the EU to annex our country and subvert our liberty. ]

Times - EU Constitution - Recent coverage of the debate about the new Europe and EU Constitution. Includes link to the full text of the draft document.
Meta Description: [ World ]

WebRing - Euro-Sceptic - Collection of groups, organizations, people and web sites critical of European federalization.
Meta Description: [ The Euro-sceptic Web Ring is devoted to linking groups, organizations, people and web sites critical of any attempts to federalize Europe. ]

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