The European Crisis Management: An Organizational Narrative

The debate of scholars in the field of international relations in last years has put the European Union’s role into the consideration. The European Foreign and Security Policy has positioned itself through its development to the constructive and normative line of research of world politics. With...

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Main Author: Patrícia Kaplánová
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Danubius University 2016-12-01
Series:Acta Universitatis Danubius: Relationes Internationales
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.univ-danubius.ro/index.php/internationalis/article/view/3772/3764
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spelling doaj-0f7b29097388493b8057ce21e4796cf92020-11-24T23:19:53ZengDanubius University Acta Universitatis Danubius: Relationes Internationales2065-02722016-12-0192521The European Crisis Management: An Organizational NarrativePatrícia Kaplánová0Faculty of Organisation Studies in Novo mesto, SloveniaThe debate of scholars in the field of international relations in last years has put the European Union’s role into the consideration. The European Foreign and Security Policy has positioned itself through its development to the constructive and normative line of research of world politics. With this respect, this article examines a character of crisis management of the European Common Foreign Policy based on the institutional development. Besides the European Union does not possess a unified foreign and security policy, regardless one army and single institutional mechanism, the recent crisis management actions have shaped the policies into a comprehensive nature. The paper overviews briefly the history of Common Foreign and Security Policy as well as Common Security and Defence Policy and focuses on crisis management of civilian and military missions. The author claims that the development has a significant impact on a character of crisis management analyzed from the institutional and financial capacities of the European Security and Defence Policy. Consequently, the character of crisis management performs complex mechanisms of responsive, political/administrative, legal, economic and human help to crisis-affected territories in the world. Respectfully, the character of crisis management has thus more pre-crisis nature of a resilience.http://journals.univ-danubius.ro/index.php/internationalis/article/view/3772/3764crisis management; CFSP; EEAS; ECHO; INFORM
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrícia Kaplánová
spellingShingle Patrícia Kaplánová
The European Crisis Management: An Organizational Narrative
Acta Universitatis Danubius: Relationes Internationales
crisis management; CFSP; EEAS; ECHO; INFORM
author_facet Patrícia Kaplánová
author_sort Patrícia Kaplánová
title The European Crisis Management: An Organizational Narrative
title_short The European Crisis Management: An Organizational Narrative
title_full The European Crisis Management: An Organizational Narrative
title_fullStr The European Crisis Management: An Organizational Narrative
title_full_unstemmed The European Crisis Management: An Organizational Narrative
title_sort european crisis management: an organizational narrative
publisher Danubius University
series Acta Universitatis Danubius: Relationes Internationales
issn 2065-0272
publishDate 2016-12-01
description The debate of scholars in the field of international relations in last years has put the European Union’s role into the consideration. The European Foreign and Security Policy has positioned itself through its development to the constructive and normative line of research of world politics. With this respect, this article examines a character of crisis management of the European Common Foreign Policy based on the institutional development. Besides the European Union does not possess a unified foreign and security policy, regardless one army and single institutional mechanism, the recent crisis management actions have shaped the policies into a comprehensive nature. The paper overviews briefly the history of Common Foreign and Security Policy as well as Common Security and Defence Policy and focuses on crisis management of civilian and military missions. The author claims that the development has a significant impact on a character of crisis management analyzed from the institutional and financial capacities of the European Security and Defence Policy. Consequently, the character of crisis management performs complex mechanisms of responsive, political/administrative, legal, economic and human help to crisis-affected territories in the world. Respectfully, the character of crisis management has thus more pre-crisis nature of a resilience.
topic crisis management; CFSP; EEAS; ECHO; INFORM
url http://journals.univ-danubius.ro/index.php/internationalis/article/view/3772/3764
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