Ideas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiations

In the mid 1990s, the European Union (EU) abandoned its legal defence of the Lomé Convention, which had governed EU relations with European former colonies in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific (the ACP countries) since 1975. In its place, the EU proposed a series of comprehensive regional free t...

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Main Author: Murray Evans, Peg
Other Authors: Heron, Tony ; Clegg, Liam
Published: University of York 2014
Subjects:
320
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.640705
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6407052017-10-04T03:18:50ZIdeas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiationsMurray Evans, PegHeron, Tony ; Clegg, Liam2014In the mid 1990s, the European Union (EU) abandoned its legal defence of the Lomé Convention, which had governed EU relations with European former colonies in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific (the ACP countries) since 1975. In its place, the EU proposed a series of comprehensive regional free trade agreements – the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) – which went far beyond the requirements of WTO rules in their scope. In this thesis, I aim to add to existing understandings of the EPAs by explaining (a) why the EU sought to recast the EU-ACP relationship in the form of ambitious interregional free trade agreements; and (b) why the EU was able to achieve only limited and uneven success in reaching agreements that matched these aims. In order to address these questions, I develop a theoretical approach that combines insights from constructivist and historical institutionalisms. I aim to contribute to existing constructivist approaches by (a) investigating the emergence of complexity and contradiction within policy outputs over time; and (b) exploring the role of strategic appeals to institutional constraints in persuasive discourse. I use this theoretical approach to draw analytical linkages between the internal processes through which EU external economic projections are formed and their external reach. Specifically, I highlight the emergence of a range of contradictions within the EU’s approach to the EPA negotiations and explore the role of these contradictions in facilitating the contestation of the EPAs by actors from across the ACP regions and particularly from the case study region, SADC-minus. Overall, I argue that the EU’s external economic policy aims and tools are the product of the strategic actions of purposive actors working within the context of path-dependent institutional structures and patterns of past relations with the outside world. In this context, the reach and limitations of EU external economic actions are contingent upon the historical processes through which they are constructed and the understandings, strategies and alternatives that external partners bring to the table.320University of Yorkhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.640705http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/8294/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 320
spellingShingle 320
Murray Evans, Peg
Ideas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiations
description In the mid 1990s, the European Union (EU) abandoned its legal defence of the Lomé Convention, which had governed EU relations with European former colonies in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific (the ACP countries) since 1975. In its place, the EU proposed a series of comprehensive regional free trade agreements – the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) – which went far beyond the requirements of WTO rules in their scope. In this thesis, I aim to add to existing understandings of the EPAs by explaining (a) why the EU sought to recast the EU-ACP relationship in the form of ambitious interregional free trade agreements; and (b) why the EU was able to achieve only limited and uneven success in reaching agreements that matched these aims. In order to address these questions, I develop a theoretical approach that combines insights from constructivist and historical institutionalisms. I aim to contribute to existing constructivist approaches by (a) investigating the emergence of complexity and contradiction within policy outputs over time; and (b) exploring the role of strategic appeals to institutional constraints in persuasive discourse. I use this theoretical approach to draw analytical linkages between the internal processes through which EU external economic projections are formed and their external reach. Specifically, I highlight the emergence of a range of contradictions within the EU’s approach to the EPA negotiations and explore the role of these contradictions in facilitating the contestation of the EPAs by actors from across the ACP regions and particularly from the case study region, SADC-minus. Overall, I argue that the EU’s external economic policy aims and tools are the product of the strategic actions of purposive actors working within the context of path-dependent institutional structures and patterns of past relations with the outside world. In this context, the reach and limitations of EU external economic actions are contingent upon the historical processes through which they are constructed and the understandings, strategies and alternatives that external partners bring to the table.
author2 Heron, Tony ; Clegg, Liam
author_facet Heron, Tony ; Clegg, Liam
Murray Evans, Peg
author Murray Evans, Peg
author_sort Murray Evans, Peg
title Ideas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiations
title_short Ideas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiations
title_full Ideas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiations
title_fullStr Ideas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiations
title_full_unstemmed Ideas and institutions in the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements : a study of EU policy evolution and the SADC-Minus negotiations
title_sort ideas and institutions in the eu-acp economic partnership agreements : a study of eu policy evolution and the sadc-minus negotiations
publisher University of York
publishDate 2014
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.640705
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