Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”

Since 2004, when the European neighbourhood policy was established, the European Union has already spent billions of euros to finance the new neighbourhood policies for creating more stable and more cooperative relations with eastern and southern neighbours. However, increased security concerns and...

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Main Author: Rakutienė Sima
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-12-01
Series:Baltic Journal of Law & Politics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/bjlp-2018-0013
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spelling doaj-00b436207e6d40e2a062fa7ce214a8fe2021-09-05T21:00:29ZengSciendoBaltic Journal of Law & Politics2029-04542018-12-0111212715410.2478/bjlp-2018-0013bjlp-2018-0013Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”Rakutienė Sima0Assistant Professor; Ph.D. Vytautas Magnus University, Faculty of Political Science and Diplomacy (Lithuania)Since 2004, when the European neighbourhood policy was established, the European Union has already spent billions of euros to finance the new neighbourhood policies for creating more stable and more cooperative relations with eastern and southern neighbours. However, increased security concerns and challenges, less stable and less prognostic relations seem to have produced the opposite result of what was sought, and so Europe is experiencing a “neighbourhood of crisis”. Did it fail? What strategy has the EU been using within the last 15 years in relations with its neighbouring countries? What specific tools and instruments have been adapted? Did the renewal of European neighbourhood policy introduce any completely new strategic elements? This article examines these questions, focusing on three perspectives suggested by role theory: intentional, interactional and institutional. The study applies qualitative research methodology and claims that the EU has been seeking to transmit not just EU values and standards but also internal institutional practices and modes of EU governance.https://doi.org/10.2478/bjlp-2018-0013eu foreign policyeastern partnershipeuropean neighbourhood policyeastern european politicseuropean external action
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rakutienė Sima
spellingShingle Rakutienė Sima
Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”
Baltic Journal of Law & Politics
eu foreign policy
eastern partnership
european neighbourhood policy
eastern european politics
european external action
author_facet Rakutienė Sima
author_sort Rakutienė Sima
title Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”
title_short Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”
title_full Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”
title_fullStr Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”
title_full_unstemmed Fatigue Within the EU’s Eastern Partnership: The EU Role in the “Neighbourhood Of Crisis”
title_sort fatigue within the eu’s eastern partnership: the eu role in the “neighbourhood of crisis”
publisher Sciendo
series Baltic Journal of Law & Politics
issn 2029-0454
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Since 2004, when the European neighbourhood policy was established, the European Union has already spent billions of euros to finance the new neighbourhood policies for creating more stable and more cooperative relations with eastern and southern neighbours. However, increased security concerns and challenges, less stable and less prognostic relations seem to have produced the opposite result of what was sought, and so Europe is experiencing a “neighbourhood of crisis”. Did it fail? What strategy has the EU been using within the last 15 years in relations with its neighbouring countries? What specific tools and instruments have been adapted? Did the renewal of European neighbourhood policy introduce any completely new strategic elements? This article examines these questions, focusing on three perspectives suggested by role theory: intentional, interactional and institutional. The study applies qualitative research methodology and claims that the EU has been seeking to transmit not just EU values and standards but also internal institutional practices and modes of EU governance.
topic eu foreign policy
eastern partnership
european neighbourhood policy
eastern european politics
european external action
url https://doi.org/10.2478/bjlp-2018-0013
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