Why do I work in Brussels? The “blue city”
has gradually become the political pole with the largest multicultural
community. Not just the European Parliament or the famous European Commission,
there are powerful embassies here too. Any economic development of the European
Union passes through the legislative network of Brussels, and thousands of
industry associative structures are presented in the capital of Europe. There
is no trade union movement that does not have its cordon at their Brussels
headquarters. Every respectable region or city has its people at the centre.
Explorers ... that are what we are in
Brussels. Every day we explore the unknown to create a better life for the
roughly half a billion EU citizens, but also for a few more billion by indirect
actions (see Neighbourhood Policy, Development and Cooperation, or even
international relations now included in the matrix The European External Action
Service - which will surely turn after Brexit into a true European Foreign
Ministry).
We look for “blue gold” every day, and
believe that the investment made is immense ... The shareholders (the European
citizens) care, but they want deliverables. It is not a blank check, and during
every crisis the patience of those who have invested in the EU is being tested.
Brussels' work is hard to quantify, permutations
between conference rooms and "European territory" are always challenged
by a fundamental question: this "laboratory analysis", often sectoral
and marginal, will it help us to discover easier the European vein?
However, we must not forget the human
resources allocated to the European mechanism, and the academic environment is
crucial in this area. For 10 years now, I have the honour of lecturing in
prestigious European faculties, but the pleasure of teaching in Brussels’
universities is special. Exceptionally, last week, I had an interaction both at
the Institut d'études européennes (ULB)
and at the Institute for European Studies (VUB)
with students about "Non-institutional actors in the making of EU
law". Even if most of the master students work from morning to evening,
they find an exciting energy in discussing the future of the EU from 18:00 to
21:00. Certainly the EU has its "fans"!
Dan LUCA / Brussels
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