Kampfner, J. (2004, August 23). Politics: With a New European Commission President Who Is Keen to Show He Is No One’s Poodle, Can Tony Blair Still Secure an Advantageous Deal for Britain in Brussels?. New Statesman, 133, 6.
Nagel, K. (2004). Transcending the National / Asserting the National: How Stateless Nations like Scotland, Wales and Catalonia React to European Integration. The Australian Journal of Politics and History, 50(1), 57+.
The Principles Underlying European Integration. (2005, November/December). Foreign Policy 2+.
Rucker, M. (2004, September/October). European Integration Unplugged. Foreign Policy 60+.
Schmidtke, O. (2007). In Search of a European Identity: Towards a Genuine Political Community?. Behind the Headlines, 64(2), 9+.
Veen, A. M. (2005). 6 The Purpose of the European Union. In The Political Economy of European Integration: Theory and Analysis, Jones, E. (Ed.) (pp. 88-107). New York: Routledge.
Verdun, A. (2005). The Political Economy of European Integration: Theory and Analysis (E. Jones, Ed.). New York: Routledge.
Wilson, T. M. (2001). Building Europe: The Cultural Politics of European Integration. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 7(3), 611.
Zahariadis, N. (2002). Rethinking European Integration in the Competition Domain: A Public Policy Approach. Policy Studies Journal, 30(2), 229+.
Cohen, N. (2005, May 20). Let Them All Come: It’s Not a Soft Touch Welfare System That Makes Britain a Magnet for Immigrants; It’s Our Need for Cheap Labour. New Statesman, 131, 22+.
Favell, A. (2001). Philosophies of Integration: Immigration and the Idea of Citizenship in France and Britain. New York: Palgrave.
Four in Five Say Britain Is Facing a Crisis over Immigration; Not This Time: UK-Bound Migrants Are Arrested at Calais. (2008, April 5). The Daily Mail (London, England), p. 12.
O’Neill, B. (2007, June 4). How Migrants Really Live: Margaret Hodge Thinks Newcomers to Britain Take Housing Which Should Go to the Indigenous Population. but There Is No Privilege in the Life of Newly Arrived Immigrants. New Statesman, 136, 28+.