The Treaty of Rome was signed at Campidoglio Palace on March 25, 1957.
Italy's News Photo/EPA
Sixty years since the Treaty of Rome was signed, the EU goal still remains clear: peace.
The U.S. and EU are stronger together.
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The Treaty of Rome, which eventually led to the European Union, is turning 60 at a time when many inside and outside Europe are questioning the union’s value. For the U.S., much is at stake.
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If you have an Irish granny, a spare €650,000 to spend in Malta, or a hankering for a new villa in Cyprus, then EU citizenship is within reach.
Can consumers keep driving the recovery?
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The UK inflation rate has leapt to 2.3% – here’s why the government is secretly happy about it.
UNDP in Europe and Central Asia
An influx of people seeking shelter from conflict has sharpened attitudes against groups which have been in Europe for centuries.
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Some radical thinking is in order if the union is to overcome the current crisis.
Rutte’s party remains the largest.
EPA/Remko De Waal
Prime Minister Mark Rutte saw off the populists, but his smaller coalition partner has been hammered.
Prime Minister Mark Rutte saw off far-right challenger Geert Wilders.
Yves Herman/Reuters
EU leaders will breathe a sigh of relief after the centre-right saw off the populist threat.
Yves Herman/Reuters
Dutch populism goes back much further than Trump, Brexit or even Geert Wilders.
EPA/Julien Warnand
Taking a hard line on hard Brexit has cost Britain goodwill just as it needs allies.
All smiles at 11 Downing Street.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
March 8, 2017
Michael Kitson , Cambridge Judge Business School ; Andrew Gunn , University of Leeds ; Catherine Needham , University of Birmingham ; Donald Hirsch , Loughborough University ; Geraint Johnes , Lancaster University ; Ian Greenwood , University of Leeds ; Jonquil Lowe , The Open University ; Kevin Farnsworth , University of York ; Michael Devereux , University of Oxford , and Simon Wren-Lewis , University of Oxford
Philip Hammond delivers his last Spring Budget on the state of the UK economy. Our panel of experts dissect what it says.
Getting his sums right?
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Recent history shows us why we should take the latest healthy forecasts with a pinch of salt.
He’s got the cheese selection, but no party.
EPA/Christophe Petit Tesson
In France, a president has no real power without a parliamentary majority. And Macron doesn’t even have a party.
Still a bit of a mystery, but an appealing one.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
He’s got Le Pen rattled at an important phase in the election campaign, even without a manifesto.
EPA/Pasquale Bove
The former PM has resigned as leader of his party in the hope of returning to the top job. But it hasn’t quite gone to plan.
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There’s a lot of talk about a Brexit ‘divorce bill’ costing the UK tens of billions – we got two academics to check the facts.
Signing the Treaty of Rome in 1957.
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It’s almost as though Europe saw Brexit coming when the Treaties of Rome were signed in 1957.
A banner deal for the auto sector?
EPA/RONALD WITTEK
The French group might well manage to turn around General Motors’ struggling division, but plants will close, and the UK looks vulnerable.
Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters
2017 could be the year of the far-right in Europe, and spell the end of the EU.
Nathan Williams
Another ‘last chance’ has been missed. But while talks disintegrate, islanders are just getting on with peace in practice.