This project went beyond the state of the art in the field regarding the argument and the methods.
Before the start of this project, the ‘E’ of EMU was barely explored in the literature, which focused essentially on monetary union. The project researched EMU in a complex framework involving up to twelve EEC member states, the EEC institutions, non-state actors, and economic thought. Conceptually, the project not only contributed to changing our understanding of the making of EMU. It also reframed the place of EMU in European cooperation and integration, broadly speaking. Indeed, several aspects studied as part of the “economic union” were only considered relevant in the literature for the development of the common/single market. For instance, the historiography on regional or social policy presents these policies as only related to the making of the common/single market. Conversely, Mourlon-Druol’s book shows how European policymakers also framed these policies as part and parcel of the making of an EMU.
Second, the project used the digital toolbox available to the historian fully. The article by Mourlon-Druol and Bergamini in the Journal of Digital History uses a wide array of methodologies – close reading, listening to audio tapes, text mining, network analysis – to open the “black box” of the records of the Delors Committee and provide evidence on the extent to which its members dealt with the issue of “economic union.” Mourlon-Druol’s book extensively uses network analysis to reinstate the role of actors made invisible by a focus on the ‘great men’ of European integration.