Professor Warlouzet is a specialist in the history of
European integration and of globalisation. He focuses on economic, social and environmental policies. In his book
Governing Europe in a Globalizing World, he interpreted the history of European integration between 1973 and 1986 as a contest between different projects, wherein
competition policy played a major role in the assertion of a
neoliberal Europe. He studied the early years of European environmental policy, and the project of democratization of companies (the '
Vredeling directive'). In
Foreign Affairs,
Andrew Moravcsik offered a balanced review of the book, stating that: “Although Warlouzet is sometimes tempted to exaggerate the range of potential choices governments faced, in the end, his book proposes some clear answers”. On
Brexit, during a roundtable with Piers Ludlow and
Jonathan Faull, Warlouzet has emphasized the outsized influence
Britain traditionally exercised over the EEC/EU during its years as a member-state. He co-edited with Brigitte Leucht and Katja Seidel Reinventing Europe, the first textbook on the history of European integration since 1945 that includes chapters on Euroscepticism, on environmental policy, on migration, and on
Central and Eastern European countries. He has published a book entitled: Liberty, Solidarity and Community. Capitalism and European Integration, 1945 to the Present arguing that capitalism is not just a contest between free-markeeters and their opponents, those in favour of welfare and environmental policies, because there is a third camp which defends protectionism and assertive defence policies. Hence, the governance of capitalism has three foundational principles – liberty, solidarity and community. He applied this lens to the history of
European integration from 1945 to 2025, with a particular focus on Britain, Germany, France and the
European Commission. The book examines debates among Europeans on how to respond to global interdependence, including issues such as the Trump challenge, the rise of protectionism, climate change, and social tensions. He has studied the growing importance of the far-right in Europe, particularly its economic policies, linking
illiberalism and
neoliberalism. An expert on EU and French politics, he writes in
Le Monde and he was quoted by the
Süddeutsche Zeitung, by the Danish newspaper Information, by the
Helsingin Sanomat, by Il
Fatto Quotidiano and by
La Libre Belgique. ==Bibliography==