blogs.lse.ac.uk<https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2026/01/12/why-europe-always-seems-to-be-in-crisis/>
Why does Europe always seem to be in crisis? - EUROPP
Blog Team
5–6 minutes
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Europe and the European Union are frequently portrayed as being in a state of 
permanent crisis. Elia R.G. Pusterla and Francesca Pusterla Piccin argue that 
only by rediscovering its responsibility to decide can the EU escape from this 
cycle.
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Why does Europe always seem to be in crisis? Is it always in crisis? When, if 
ever, was it not in crisis? And which Europe and which crisis are we talking 
about? In a recent study<https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.10072>, we address these 
questions.
The association between Europe and crisis has been topical for several decades. 
However, this very fact – that the term “crisis” has long been used in 
connection with some often-generic idea of “Europe” – should give one pause.
Indeed, an interpretive dilemma swiftly emerges between the risk of overusing 
the term “crisis” to describe practically everything about Europe and the 
alternative possibility that everything falling under the “European” label 
remains inherently linked to the concept of crisis.
Europe and the EU’s “permanent crisis”
The conceptual connection between Europe and crisis is frequently deployed and 
serves as the logical core to address heterogeneous sets of political themes, 
arguments and analyses.
These analyses often generate and carry implicit assumptions. Among these is 
the idea that, when it comes to politics, “Europe” almost automatically stands 
for the “European 
Union<https://global.oup.com/academic/product/political-theory-of-the-european-union-9780199587308?cc=ch&lang=en&;>”.
 This semantic juxtaposition suggests the very possibility of European politics 
appears linked to that of the EU.
Indeed, when discussing Europe and its allegedly uninterrupted series of 
crises<https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2025/04/28/greece-and-the-eu-in-the-age-of-permacrisis/>,
 or the EU’s so-called state of “permanent 
crisis<https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/crises-and-challenges-for-the-european-union-9781350342903/>”,
 one is always establishing a connection between Europe and crisis, while not 
necessarily grasping the logical depth of that link. Yet, this link originates 
in a conceptual history that significantly predates the formation of the 
EU<https://nupress.northwestern.edu/9780810167988/crisis-of-european-sciences-and-transcendental-phenomenology/>.
The EU’s own way
Before considering the long 
history<https://www.wiley.com/en-us/The+Birth+of+Europe-p-9781405137263> of 
Europe’s relationship with crisis, we need to understand how the EU’s shorter 
history fits into it. We also need to determine whether, in the relationship 
between the idea of 
Europe<https://www.wiley.com/en-us/The+Birth+of+Europe-p-9781405137263> and 
that of crisis, a precise logic is at work. Due to the profound connection 
between “Europe” and “crisis”, it is necessary to examine the EU’s own way of 
relating itself to both Europe and crisis.
It can be argued that the EU’s permanent crisis is connected to a “critical 
Europeanness”, where “critical” stands for “crisis” as a “decisive moment” 
(from the ancient Greek krinō). It follows that the EU’s permanent crisis can 
appear as a “crisis of crisis” reflecting the EU’s inability to act decisively.
Crisis has indeed been a defining feature of Europe’s history and nature, and, 
as such, has always kept the European continent engaged in the never fully 
accomplished, seemingly infinite 
task<https://www.sup.org/books/literary-studies-and-literature/europe-or-infinite-task>
 of synthesising highly complex and divisive differences across cultural, 
geographical, philosophical and other orders. But what is stopping the EU from 
fully embracing this European tradition and turning a crisis into action?
The responsibility to decide
It stands to reason that crises affect political actors at all levels, not just 
the EU. Yet, if the EU is facing a permanent crisis, it does not follow that 
this is the same as that faced by other political actors. Indeed, regardless of 
the EU’s ability to deal with crises, what is striking is that it takes so 
little to deem the EU inadequate or as something less than a legitimate 
political entity that brings real added value to politics.
The EU’s activities are often viewed through a lens of 
Euroscepticism<https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/tag/euroscepticism/> that 
fails to understand the EU’s actions. This is partly due to the EU’s inability 
to present itself in a decisive light. Eurosceptics might see more significance 
in the EU if it presented itself as embodying a political meaning beyond the 
mere poverty of state 
institutions<https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-98479-2>.
Consequently, the EU finds itself in the position of having to decisively make 
critical decisions in accordance with the enormous scope of its European 
vocation. Paradoxically, the hesitant approach it has adopted – which avoids 
the language of 
“sovereignty<https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/E0305149809000467>” 
and instead adopts the far vaguer notion of the “supremacy” of EU law – is 
counterproductive.
This approach creates a political void that it is all too easy to criticise as 
political emptiness or indecision. The EU, by contrast, relates to the great 
European historical canvas of critical decisions – of bravely deciding what 
politics must be about, beyond the ideological fences of nation states.
Only by rediscovering and moving forward with its responsibility to decide 
politically, and the morality this entails, can the EU escape the “crisis of 
crisis” and finally become, without reservation, European.
For more information, see the authors’ recent 
study<https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.10072> in Politics and 
Governance<https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance>.
________________________________
Note: This article gives the views of the authors, not the position of LSE 
European Politics or the London School of Economics.
Image credit: European 
Union<https://newsroom.consilium.europa.eu/permalink/p217043>.
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