Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian Relationship

Casting the spotlight over a complex and dynamic relationship, this article seeks to diagnose the state of relations between the European Union and Australia by contrasting the sources of tension with the forces of unity in the relationship. After illuminating the substantial differences between th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Luke Raffin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2007-09-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
CAP
EU
Online Access:https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/38
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spelling doaj-1d2c1f5fccac49cf80e04232307219082020-11-25T04:02:46ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2007-09-0132Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian RelationshipLuke RaffinCasting the spotlight over a complex and dynamic relationship, this article seeks to diagnose the state of relations between the European Union and Australia by contrasting the sources of tension with the forces of unity in the relationship. After illuminating the substantial differences between the EU and Australia in the political, military and economic spheres, the article asserts that the Common Agricultural Policy (‘CAP’) has disproportionately influenced the EU-Australia dialogue and — like the Howard Government’s propensity to bilateralism — needlessly impeded the advancement of relations. The impact of bilateral relations with the United States and the increasingly contentious challenges posed by global climate change have threatened to destabilise the bond between Brussels and Canberra. However, the article insists that the destructive potential of CAP-related disagreement is dissipating. Rather, debates over agriculture in the EU-Australia dialogue have been emasculated by rapidly intensifying social, political and cultural integration. Moreover, the development of Australia’s relationships with its Asian neighbours promises to optimise Australian engagement with Europe. After carefully weighing these competing factors, the article concludes that — despite the transitory phases of discord — the future for the EU-Australia relationship is bright.https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/38CAPAustraliaEUExternal Relations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luke Raffin
spellingShingle Luke Raffin
Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian Relationship
Journal of Contemporary European Research
CAP
Australia
EU
External Relations
author_facet Luke Raffin
author_sort Luke Raffin
title Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian Relationship
title_short Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian Relationship
title_full Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian Relationship
title_fullStr Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian Relationship
title_full_unstemmed Indivisible Partners or Enduring Combatants? Divisions and Triumphs in the EU-Australian Relationship
title_sort indivisible partners or enduring combatants? divisions and triumphs in the eu-australian relationship
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2007-09-01
description Casting the spotlight over a complex and dynamic relationship, this article seeks to diagnose the state of relations between the European Union and Australia by contrasting the sources of tension with the forces of unity in the relationship. After illuminating the substantial differences between the EU and Australia in the political, military and economic spheres, the article asserts that the Common Agricultural Policy (‘CAP’) has disproportionately influenced the EU-Australia dialogue and — like the Howard Government’s propensity to bilateralism — needlessly impeded the advancement of relations. The impact of bilateral relations with the United States and the increasingly contentious challenges posed by global climate change have threatened to destabilise the bond between Brussels and Canberra. However, the article insists that the destructive potential of CAP-related disagreement is dissipating. Rather, debates over agriculture in the EU-Australia dialogue have been emasculated by rapidly intensifying social, political and cultural integration. Moreover, the development of Australia’s relationships with its Asian neighbours promises to optimise Australian engagement with Europe. After carefully weighing these competing factors, the article concludes that — despite the transitory phases of discord — the future for the EU-Australia relationship is bright.
topic CAP
Australia
EU
External Relations
url https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/38
work_keys_str_mv AT lukeraffin indivisiblepartnersorenduringcombatantsdivisionsandtriumphsintheeuaustralianrelationship
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