List of Tables List of Figures Acknowledgements Foreword Notes on the Contributors PART I: WHAT MAKES THE MARGINS MARGINAL? Integrated Europe and its 'Margins': Action and Reaction; N.Parker European Integration through the Kaleidoscope: The View from the Central and Eastern European Margins; H.E.Hartnell European Integration, Market Liberalization and Regional Disparities; V.Lintner Economic Development on the Periphery of the European Union; L.Budd PART II: MANAGING ECONOMIC FORCES AT THE MARGINS EU Trade and Aid Strategy in the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean; M.Toksoz Multi-national Investment on the Periphery of the EU; C.Flockton Transnational Planning on the German-Polish Border; A.Kennard PART III: THE POLITICAL POSSIBILITIES OF MARGINALITY European Union Governance and National Territorial Politics: Rewriting Marginality in Spain and Portugal; J.Magone Euroscepticism in the Ideology of the British Right; C.G.Flood Home at Last?: Czech Views of Joining the EU; P.Bugge Historical Memory and the Boundaries of European Integration; H.Frey Concluding Observations Index