Regional Fragmentation and EU Foreign and Security Policy
There is broad academic consensus on the fact that the fragmentation of regions presents a significant challenge for the EU. Fragmentation undermines the authority of central states, the EU’s most natural counterparts, and distributes it amongst a great number of actors – including non-state armed groups. To address fragmentation, the EU should increase coordination between actors (EU institutions and member states), integrate actions across different policy areas (security and non-security, external and internal) and engage with external players (multilateral organisations, global powers, regional and local actors).
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Details
Rome, IAI, November 2021, 28 p. -
In:
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Issue
JOINT Research Paper 3
Introduction
1. The concept of regional fragmentation
2. Levels of fragmentation
3. Drivers of fragmentation
4. Actors of fragmentation
5. Effects of fragmentation
6. Effects of fragmentation on the EU’s ability to address crises and conflict
6.1 Challenges posed by fragmentation to EU foreign and security policy
6.2 Addressing fragmentation in EU foreign and security policy
Conclusion
References