Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Glasgow Caledonian University Home
Help & FAQ
Home
Profiles
Organisational Units
Research Outputs
Projects
Student theses
Activities
Prizes
Equipment
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
European economic governance in 2017: a recovery for whom?
Rosalind Cavaghan, Muireann O'Dwyer
Economics
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
31
Citations (Scopus)
323
Downloads (Pure)
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'European economic governance in 2017: a recovery for whom?'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
European Integration
100%
EU Economic Policy
100%
EU Studies
100%
Economic Actors
100%
Positive Stories
100%
European Economic Governance
100%
EU Economy
100%
Racialised
100%
European Commission
50%
Political Economy
50%
European Union
50%
Politics
50%
Marginalized Groups
50%
Socioeconomic
50%
Political Arena
50%
Gender Blindness
50%
Normality
50%
Global Market
50%
Post-crisis
50%
Women's Groups
50%
Economic Motivation
50%
Power Structure
50%
Schmidt
50%
EU Institutions
50%
Governance Structure
50%
Macroeconomic Policy
50%
Economic Interests
50%
Economic Priorities
50%
Economic Well-being
50%
Feminist Political Economy
50%
Economic Approach
50%
Strategic Silence
50%
EU Integration
50%
Intersectional Perspective
50%
Intersectional
50%
Economic Success
50%
Constitutive Effects
50%
Common Economic Space
50%
Finance Market
50%
Economic Narratives
50%
EU Economic Governance
50%
Economic Power
50%
Political Opportunism
50%
Economic Assumptions
50%
Social Sciences
Narrative
100%
European Integration
50%
Finance
25%
Political Arena
25%
Political Economics
25%
Power-Structure
25%
European Commission
25%
Opportunism
25%
Economic Approach
25%
Economic Power
25%
Economic Success
25%
Economic Policy
25%