Purpose[edit]

This discussion is meant to clarify whether the European Union constitutes a special case that merits inclusion in such lists and graphics as (but not limited to):

Arguments[edit]

Basic arguments for and against this include:

Not a country
Furthermore, while the EU is not a country, many authors and analysts (most notably Leonard, McCormack, Reid, Rifkin, ...) state that the EU is, or is about to become, the world's second superpower next to the US -- and how can we not include what many analysts consider to be a superpower?

Against - Not a country, not even a de facto state...if you consider it one then remove all of its sonstituent members from the country list.--Tomtom9041 17:25, 4 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

WP:OR, WP:C, WP:V
Precedent
Overlap

Opinions[edit]

Please state your opinion on this case. Suggested stances would be:

Of course, you're free to state other opinions, such as e.g. "always include, without exceptions", "never include, without exceptions", etc. pp. We'll gather opinions on this issue until 21 August, after which we'll try to find some kind of consensus on what to do. Thanks for participating!

Include with exceptions, or similar

Make notes or include, or similar

Exclude with exceptions, or similar

Discussion[edit]

This system has been a bit of a debate killer, all everyone is doing is stating their opinion without any exchange of ideas. I'll just say that I am not going to argue that the EU is a soverign state as others are, however it does have the importance of one.

Whether this makes it a country or not is debatable, but it clearly has the importance of one. It takes on many state-like duties and simply cannot be confused with other organisations - nothing has come this far and nothing will for well over a decade at the most optimistic plans. Hence, it ought to be mentioned due to this importance. Reply? - J Logan t: 08:14, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Not surprisingly, I agree. —Nightstallion 10:26, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This could motivate editors to include it in their country lists certainly but this sentiment should not be allowed to be used as some sort of policy consensus that editors must accept the unranked inclusion of the EU in all country list articles.Zebulin (talk) 01:03, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

If it has the characteristics and importance of being a country, why is there no push to have it included in List of countries. All other lists are just ranked lists of countries. If the EU is in the main list, then the rest of the list will follow. --Polaron | Talk 18:10, 21 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

@Polaron: You are right. There is no reason not to include it in the lists of countries. Hongkong and Macao are listed as well as Mainland China. Even more important: The EC (part of EU) acts sovereign and acts on a common binding legal basis. It is a juristic person and be considered a state. Lear 21 (talk) 01:33, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I think that this focus on whether the EU is sovereign or not is completely irrelevant. After all, "Earth" or "World" appears on most of these lists, and that's not a sovereign state. It is, though, rightly included, because it's good to have a comparison available. Also frequently included are Taiwan, Hong Kong, the Isle of Man, and Gibraltar, amongst others, which do not fit all the criteria set out to fit into the "country" lists. Also frequently omitted are England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, again amongst others, though they are sovereign to a degree. It's all very, very confusing, and can't possibly be fixed by drawing up a list of criteria to meet. I, personally, would go for anything relevant being included. I'd include Wales and England, because it'd be nice to see how much of the UK is comprised by Wales or England. I'd include the EU, because it'd be interesting to see how much of the EU's landmass or population is made up of Germany. These entries would not be ranked, because they're not countries. But they should be included. People adding any sort of political spin to it are compromising the very spirit of an encyclopaedia. My wish to include the EU does not necessarily make me a pro-EU person. My inclusion of Scotland would not be because of a desire to see the UK split up. To deny Taiwan a ranked place would not make me pro-China. We need to strip all the politics out of this, and get on with making these lists informative. 62.49.22.228 (talk) 16:20, 13 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Conclusion[edit]

So, what do we conclude from this debate? Any proposals? —Nightstallion 11:01, 27 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

That's a good question. We should open a sub-sub-section to discuss it... Švitrigaila 12:26, 27 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
That is was a huge waste of time as everyone has just stated their position and gone to bed. I did try to get a discussion by responding to some points and hoped we could get talking and minds could be changed but now it has all died down again. Perhaps if Lear would like to vandalise the pages again it might get people back. Otherwise there is no conclusion that can be drawn, except we disagree. - J Logan t: 17:29, 27 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Not a surprise, if you have been around the "list" pages, the adamant positions of the two sides is palpable. I primarily edit the list of countries by area article, and for months there has been a compromise that puts the EU in the explanatory notes at the beginning but not in the list. It is not optimal, but there is no optimal choice with such strong opposed stances. Malnova 22:56, 27 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Fair enough as a compromise, especially in those fields where the EU can not be said to have any synergetic value as its own entity. —Nightstallion 23:10, 27 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This example of "vandalism" by Lear has brought me here. Strangely, he is claiming this discussion page as his justification for adding the EU to List of countries by English-speaking population. I have no problem with listing the EU in a footnote or preamble as suggested above, however. - BillCJ (talk) 19:52, 23 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Lear has indeed been using this discussion page to suggest that there exists a rough consensus that the EU should appear unranked within all country lists to make country lists more consistent. I came here to throw in my two cents but I see most of my important points have already been made and I'm very puzzled as to how Lear construes any sort of consensus to exist here. The only thing I would want to add is elaboration on the point that *none* of the trappings of a country (not directly connected to the definition of a sovereign state) are sufficient to confer some sort of partial sovereign state qualification. If there is not consensus on that point at least then there would be a great deal I'd like to say here such as a variety of counter examples and authoritative sourcesZebulin (talk) 00:14, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think the way it currently looks like (included in the table, not ranked) is fine, actually, but feel free to propose a different way to implement it. —Nightstallion 22:44, 23 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
My take on this is
  • WP:V requires citation of supporting sources. Any entries (supranational, subnational, or national) not supported by cited reliable sources should be expunged or presented without asserting unsupported information and tagged with ((cn)).
  • An article with a title of "List of countries ..." should contain a list of countries. However, "List of countries, supranational entities and subnational entities ..." being such an unwieldy title, such an article might be titled simply "List of countries ..." and might footnote entries for supranational and subnational entries; explaining that the inclusion of these entries, though not strictly in keeping with the article title, was done as a convenience to readers of the article.
  • WP:OR might be tolerated to some extent if that seemed useful for purposes of the article — e.g., in an "Areas of U.S. States" article adding the cite-supported areas of California, Oregon, and Washington and listing the computed sum, with an explanatory footnote, as the area of "Pacific coast states". This same reasoning applies to accretion of figures of individual EU members into an overall figure for the EU. However, that's a bit more complicated to do and a bit more complicated to verify by inspection than my earlier contrived example — a judgement call is needed here, and I'd say that this case is complicated enough to need citation of a verifiable supporting source, rather than an unsupported "trust me, I've got it right" assertion.
-- Boracay Bill (talk) 00:03, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Just list the EU without a specific rank! Does it really need to become such an issue?! Imperium Europeum (talk) 05:54, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I find it difficult not to smirk when I hear such arguments out of people with "Europe" in their User name (IMPERIUM Europeum no less!). It is obviously a HUGE issue with you. I could click on your name to find the EU .gif, but why bother? The editors who are against putting the EU on some of these lists come from all spectra, the pro-EU editors arguing here and elsewhere have only one issue when it comes to these lists. By and large, every editor pushing for the EU entry in these articles is there only to get the EU in, not for the good of the article. I look forward to the day when I hear a pro-EU editor in these lists with a User name like User:Listsofcountriesrock!. Alas, the wait is in vain. Malnova (talk) 05:56, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Right you find one person with Europe in the name, what about Rossenglish? You can hardly say he is obsessed with the EU. Further more you can't use an editors background like that to dismiss their argument, such a tactic is cowardly. Have you considered that the people with an interest in the subject might actually have information and a grasp of the subject that others may not?
The importance of the EU should not be excluded here, it is not going to be ranked just shown in comparison rather than as a "country". There are reliable figures in many cases, such as from the IMF etc, and at least in Economic issues it should be included as in that area the activity of the EU is primarily federal.- J Logan t: 09:47, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I never claimed that everybody who supports EU entries in these lists has Euro in their name or on their user page, nor anything similar. Admittedly, I pettily (though not cowardly) jumped the gun, having been jaded by edit wars in these list with Users who have names such as Eurocoptre, who assume everyone against having the EU in these lists is American, and who never make an edit to these lists EXCEPT to add the EU. If the above User had not said, "What's all the fuss about?" I would have left his username out of it. And most importantly, simply saying a non-ranked EU is the solution doesn't do it. I have seen edit wars over EU inclusion in these lists for years now and the reason that such a long discussion such as the one here ensues is that a large number of people oppose the EU's entry whether it's ranked OR unranked just as adamantly as others insist on an EU entry. I have no problem with the EU being listed on economic lists as it is essentially one entity economically. The other lists are a different story, and a lot of people agree with me.Malnova (talk) 10:03, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Fair enough.
Well I'd agree that others are a different matter. Economic ones would include the GDP, HDI and exports for sure. Semi economic you could argue would be rail transport network size, as there is work on things like that. Population I think could also be an economic point, as you are talking about workforce as well, and a lot of other issues. Plus with things like free movement, immigration, citizenship, elections. I think one could argue for that. Density though, same point can't be made. Area is another borderline as you could state there are common policies on environment, agriculture and so on but probably not worth it. English-speaking population, well in terms of it being interesting language wise, and language is important to the EU, but it isn't something I'd fight for. The List of countries itself is explicitly a list of countries, I don't see any advantages to the EU's inclusion here. Who put it up? Military expenditures probably isn't worth it as there is no co-ordination so to include it would be misleading. There is a lot of waste on duplication, so it isn't as comparable as other points. - J Logan t: 12:31, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think defence expenditure is also a valid area, because there *is* coordination -- ever heard of ESDP? ;)Nightstallion 13:44, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
So long as NATO is given a place on those defence expenditure lists it's not easy to justify denying a space for other defence alliances calculated the same way. There has to be a sharp dividing line or no dividing line at all.Zebulin (talk) 22:30, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I certainly agree that NATO should not be on a list of countries, regardless of the nature of the list. Malnova (talk) 22:45, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Agree with JLogan. @Malnova: It is likely that rather Europeans are informed about the EU status and it´s degree of integrated policies. Because of the EU´s recent developments (historically spoken) like the Maastricht treaty 1993, Euro currency issued 2002, several enlargements (latest 2007) and many others, the knowledge about these facts has not yet become globally spread. The semi-sovereign nature of the EU still remains and leads to the special inclusion in the Wikipedia lists. Lear 21 (talk) 17:00, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I am well aware of the developments you speak of Lear, and admit the EU is unique. I, and others (who are generally well-informed about such things which is why they editing these lists) still do not feel the EU belongs on most lists. And once again, if the people arguing for EU inclusion on these lists had any other input/feedback/editorial work/ideas to add to these lists besides "add the EU", I would be more open to finding a way to accommodate them. In my experience the only other input a pro-EU inclusion editor has had was to change the name of an article to "list of territories" to make it sound more "inclusive" and in turn increase the legitimacy of an EU entry. Malnova (talk) 22:27, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

@Nightstallion, it is only minor though, just a bit of co-ordination. The vast bulk of expenditure and operations are still independent. In the future maybe but the state of the EU military is dire right now. If if was co-ordinated it would be far more effective, we have more troops than the US but look at the capacity for deployment. Speaks for itself.
@Lear, in a lot of areas that is true, yet I think the core basis for inclusion should be its relevance for informative purposes rather than comparison to country, Hence we cannot argue for its inclusion by default. If you support any areas past those I supported above, please argue for them, maybe I missed something. - J Logan t: 22:34, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

@Malnova: Your general statement can´t be attested. The pro-inclusion argumentation line on this article and the respective Country list articles is detailed, thoroughly and based on sources. It encompasses a multitude of approaches why or how the EU entry has to be included. This is backed and approved by at least 13 editors, who understand the rationale and are able to articulate it. Lear 21 (talk) 23:23, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Can your general statement about Europeans above be attested Lear? The pro-EU editors here, many of them very informed and diplomatic, have no monopoly on articulation or on a rationale for their position. Malnova (talk) 23:38, 24 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Proposal[edit]

From the discussion here so far I would guess that many editors have differing opinions about the manner in which the EU should appear in list articles depending on which particular article is being discussed. Rather than attempt to hash out a one size fits all approach for all such articles with respect to the EU why not just simply continue to let it be worked out on the discussion page of each individual article case by case? The arguments for inclusion of the EU appear to hinge most strongly on it's proposed sui generis status. Since it's status is so unique wouldn't it be logical to assume that it's resemblance to a country will vary depending on what trait the countries are being compared on? The very nature of a sui generis status would appear to argue against formulating a uniform approach to the EU as a country. Furthermore, while it may seem convenient to decide once and for all how to treat the EU on this page but it's hardly fair to the editors interested in the various articles that will be effected by such a consensus to do so. I propose that any further discussion of this issue continue separately in each related articles discussion page.Zebulin (talk) 12:34, 25 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]


I saw this page as an attempt to hash out all the EU disputes that have been going on for some time on many of these pages. It was a worthy intellectual exercise, but the debate, and most likely edit wars will indeed go on in the individual pages. Malnova (talk) 21:20, 26 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Characteristics of the EU[edit]

Personally I am neither anti-EU nor pro-EU (at best I might describe myself as pro-peace and pro-regionalism). However, having looked on the debates, it seems that a lot of the arguments in favour of including the EU on lists of countries or for calling the EU a country at all, rest on the assumption that the EU’s characteristics are unique. This seems to be due to a lack of knowledge about other international institutions as well and the degree of integration that other regions of the world have undergone. Some of the characteristics cited are also irrelevant for defining a country (such as holding elections – that is only relevant for defining a democracy and even then China and Cuba hold elections. But not all countries hold elections and before the advent of representative or consultative government elections were found in only some places). Below I have listed all the characteristics put forward (that I have found in browsing this and some other pages) in support of adding the EU to various lists. I’ve also attempted to include examples of other regional or international organizations to which these characteristics apply:

Many would get the idea that no other regional organization has achieved the same level of integration as the EU, however its not hard to see how that idea would come about since Wikipedia is woefully lacking in information on the other regional organizations which contributes to the continued lack of awareness/knowledge about these organizations and their achievements - for instance the EAC has plans for form a new country called the East African Federation between 2010 and 2013 (with 2020 as the outside maximum date for achieving this). The EU has done much, but it would be stretching it believe that the EU has plans to form a Federation of Europe by even 2020 (there are no such plans even today). Also can anybody provide a reference for the classification of the EU as sui generis? I’ve only seen this description on Wikipedia and its copycat sites. It also seems strange that something that is sui generis should be categorized at all (if the EU is unique enough in the world that it shouldn't be categorized with regional/international organizations how can it be considered and categorized as a country at the same time?).208.138.28.64 (talk) 00:06, 26 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]