From post-war reconciliation to European integration? Competing historicities of ‘exchange’ in European small-town twinning
Abstract
Abstract
Town twinning is often seen as a linear driving force of European integration. This article
argues that town twinning’s historicity is more complex. The initial post-war period,
according to today’s practitioners’ accounts, was characterized by a high degree of personal
involvement which transformed into an exposure to relationship uncertainty. By way of
contrast, twinning practices since the 1990s are reported as being driven by a more
managerial logic. The shift from the imaginary of ‘reconciliation’ to that of ‘integration’
comes along with a change in twinning practices, the distribution of responsibilities and the
share of personal involvement and exposure.
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