You appear to have a few dates regarding enlargement a bit wrong. Auatria, Sweden and Finland were the first to join in 1995. Then the next phase was in 2004. Where many of the nations you mentioned became full members. All 3 baltic states, Slovenia, Slovakia, Czechia, Poland, Cyprus, Malta and regrettably Hungary too.
This is a fairly standard history of the European Union. It might have a good idea to mention the Marshal Plan Programme of 1948 and America's insistence that the European states in that plan (led primarily by France) form a permanent body to regulate the money, thus was the OEEC (Organisation for European Economic Cooperation) born, an important milestone on the journey to European unity and one sponsored very much by the United States.
Hi. This lesson is part of a broader series on EU Law, so I felt it not necessary to go into too much detail. In the future I'd be really excited to do a dedicated series on the history of the EU which will have way more depth!
How can you make a mistake in such a basic thing as the date when Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia became members of the EU? The 10 countries joined on 1 May 2004. I was so excited to learn from you, but now I'm disappointed and not sure whether I can enjoy the lectures or will have to doubt and fact-check everything you say
Easy mistakes are the easiest to make I'm afraid. Where there are mistakes, I encourage people to comment them down below and I will pin comments that correct them.
@thelawacademy1 I would greatly appreciate a correction on the slides. However, I'm not the first one to point out that mistake. There's a comment from 3 months ago about the same matter, really
@@КлубИнвесторов-л3е Putting a correction on the slides would require re-recording and re-uploading the whole lesson. I have a policy where mistakes that are relatively minor will be corrected with pinned comments or in the description.
You appear to have a few dates regarding enlargement a bit wrong.
Auatria, Sweden and Finland were the first to join in 1995.
Then the next phase was in 2004. Where many of the nations you mentioned became full members. All 3 baltic states, Slovenia, Slovakia, Czechia, Poland, Cyprus, Malta and regrettably Hungary too.
great classes, thank you for the videos!
Great content, thank you.
This is a fairly standard history of the European Union. It might have a good idea to mention the Marshal Plan Programme of 1948 and America's insistence that the European states in that plan (led primarily by France) form a permanent body to regulate the money, thus was the OEEC (Organisation for European Economic Cooperation) born, an important milestone on the journey to European unity and one sponsored very much by the United States.
Hi. This lesson is part of a broader series on EU Law, so I felt it not necessary to go into too much detail. In the future I'd be really excited to do a dedicated series on the history of the EU which will have way more depth!
If you have any questions, let us know in the comments below!
How can you make a mistake in such a basic thing as the date when Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia became members of the EU? The 10 countries joined on 1 May 2004. I was so excited to learn from you, but now I'm disappointed and not sure whether I can enjoy the lectures or will have to doubt and fact-check everything you say
Easy mistakes are the easiest to make I'm afraid. Where there are mistakes, I encourage people to comment them down below and I will pin comments that correct them.
@thelawacademy1 I would greatly appreciate a correction on the slides. However, I'm not the first one to point out that mistake. There's a comment from 3 months ago about the same matter, really
@@КлубИнвесторов-л3е Putting a correction on the slides would require re-recording and re-uploading the whole lesson. I have a policy where mistakes that are relatively minor will be corrected with pinned comments or in the description.
@@thelawacademy1fair enough, thank you
EU had few History,only IA