“…Beck and Grande (, p. 241) call this process “cosmopolitan integration”. It is marked by the reconciliation of differences in social policy practices and transformative cooperation (in which MS and their interests undergo change or “Europeanization”), through cross‐national dialog, sharing of administrative cultures and languages, subsidiarity (including the “co‐existence of multiple demoi ” (Borrás, Radaelli, & Borra, : 130), normative reflection, mutual learning, Europeanization for governmental actors, and experimentation that the OMC facilitates in all its cosmopolitan openness to alternatives (cf., Barbier, ; de la Porte & Pochet, ). In this image, Social Europe is arranged to ensure maximum mobility across Europe and the world and to find human rights‐informed ways of coping with social issues, particularly mobility of labor and migration (and hence resist the temptation of “Fortress Europe”, the major rival of “cosmopolitan Europe”) (Morris, ; Schlenker, ).…”