This is a start-of-the-art consideration of the European Union’s crisis response mechanisms. It brings together scholars from a range of disciplinary backgrounds to examine how and why the EU responds to crises on its borders and further afield. The work is based on extensive fieldwork in among another places, Afghanistan, Libya, Mali and Iraq. The book considers the construction of crises and how some issues are deemed crises and others not. A major finding from this comparative study is that EU crisis response interventions have been placing increasing emphasis on security and stabilisation and less emphasis on human rights and democratisation. This changes – quite fundamentally – the EU’s stance as an international actor and leads to questions about the nature of the EU and how it perceives itself and is perceived by others. The volume is able to bring together scholars from EU Studies and Peace and Conflict Studies. The result showcases concept and theory-building alongside case study research.
Author(s): Roger Mac Ginty, Sandra Pogodda, Oliver P. Richmond
Edition: 1
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Year: 2021
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 247
Tags: European Union; Stabilisation; Securitisation; International Intervention; Peacebuilding; Conflict Management; Crisis Response; Crisis Transformation
Cover
Half-title
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Figures
Tables
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1 | Introduction: controversies over gaps within EU crisis management policy
2 | Critical crisis transformation: a framework for understanding EU crisis response
3 | The potential and limits of EU crisis response
4 | The EU’s integrated approach to crisis response: learning from the UN, NATO and OSCE
5 | Securitisation of the EU approach to the Western Balkans: from conflict transformation
6 | The paradoxes of EU crisis response in Afghanistan, Iraq and Mali
7 | The effectiveness of EU crisis response in Afghanistan, Iraq and Mali
8 | Dissecting the EU response to the ‘migration crisis’
Index