European Security Post-Libya and Post-Ukraine: In Search of Core Leadership
The paper analyses the future governance of the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP). Unlike other policy areas, the main challenges for CSDP stem from the lack of a core leadership and common purpose rather than from institutional design faults. Alongside, the EU's dysfunctional relationship with NATO has reduced the CSDP to a largely civilian crisis management endeavour in the wider EU neigbourhood. Moving forward, the EU ought to capitalize on sub-regional integration efforts in this field, while maintaining the EU as a whole as the basic reference point and common framework for deeper integration between groups of member states.
Paper produced within the framework of the project "Towards a More United and Effective Europe". Revised version of a paper presented at the IAI-Notre Europe seminar on "European Security after Libya and Ukraine: in search of a core leadership", Paris, 29 April 2014.
-
Details
Roma, Istituto affari internazionali, May 2014, 36 p. -
In:
-
Issue
8
1. Introduction
2. Regional Approaches
3. Regional Initiatives: Examples and Concepts
4. A Conceptual Framework for Northwestern Europe
5. Opportunities and Risks
6. Testing Regional Approaches: The Next Steps Forward
6.1. Terminology
6.2. Bottom-up Processes
6.3. Top-down Approaches
6.4. Institutional Issues and Governance
6.5. Subsidiarity
7. A Way Forward
8. Recommendations
References
Topic
Tag
Related content
-
Event12/01/2015
European Security after Libya and Ukraine
leggi tutto -
Publication30/12/2014
Imagining Europe
leggi tutto -
Ricerca27/06/2013
Towards a More United and Effective Europe: Beyond the 2014 European Parliament Elections
leggi tutto