1930

The New Order, for a humane Europe

The financial crisis of 1929 made its mark on European minds. The 'New Order', a movement launched by the French intellectual Alexandre Marc in 1930, was based on the concept of 'personalism', which differed from individualism in that the person was considered as an integral part of a community. This movement called for a federal organisation within Europe, in which the communities (local authorities, regions, etc.), while being linked to each other, would remain autonomous. Marc hoped to bring the people of Europe together to lend the continent a human dimension. The Swiss intellectual Denis de Rougemont was also part of the New Order, working on the journal of the same name and on 'Esprit', published by Emmanuel Mounier from 1931 onwards. After the War, they founded the 'Union of European Federalists' (1946).