Author (Person) | Biscop, Sven |
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Publisher | Royal Institute for International Relations (Egmont Institute) |
Series Title | Egmont Papers |
Series Details | No. 54, January 2012 |
Publication Date | January 2012 |
ISBN | 978-90-382-1905-9 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
EU has not been perceived as reacting very rapidly or effectively to the so called Arab Spring. Events do validate the underpinning idea of the European Security Strategy and the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP): only where governments guarantee to their citizens security, prosperity, freedom and equality, can peace and stability last; otherwise, people will revolt. But in practice, in its southern neighbourhood the EU has acted in precisely the opposite manner, so the Arab Spring is occurring in spite of rather than thanks to EU policy. The ENP stands at a crossroads therefore: Can a new start be made? Which instruments and, in times of austerity, which means can the EU apply to consolidate democratization? And, finally, can the EU continue to wage an ENP without addressing the hard security dimension, especially as the US seem to be withdrawing from crisis management in the region – or shall it continue to leave that to others? In this joint publication, the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS), Egmont and the European Policy Centre (EPC), address some of the key dimensions of the EU’s engagement with the Mediterranean region. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://aei.pitt.edu/33465/ |
Countries / Regions | Eastern Europe, Middle East, Northern Africa |