On 25 March 2017, the leaders of the European Union (EU) came together to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Rome
Treaties. The EU and its members had good reasons to celebrate. The European integration process has been the product of
grand aspirations inspired by the imagination of pragmatic visionaries, born of the experience of two devastating world wars.
In 1957, the founding member states embarked on a journey without a clear destination, but based on a commitment to work
together and solve their differences within a common institutional framework in the hope of breaking Europe’s century-old
vicious cycle of violence and vengeance. Six decades later, the continent has overcome its deep historical divisions and
cooperation among EU countries has become a lived reality that now constitutes part of Europe’s collective DNA. The
European integration project is far from perfect and its history is littered with crises. But despite many heavy blows, the project
has always bounced backed and emerged stronger than befor