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A strategy for EU foreign policy / contributors, Esra Bulut, Nicola Casarini, Sabine Fischer, ... [et al.] ; edited by Álvaro de Vasconcelos

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  • A strategy for EU foreign policy / contributors, Esra Bulut, Nicola Casarini, Sabine Fischer, ... [et al.] ; edited by Álvaro de Vasconcelos
  • Paris : European Union Institute for security studies, 2010
  • 1 vol. (81 p.) ; 24 cm
  • ISS report no. 7
  • Report no. ... (European Union Institute for Security Studies) 1830-9747 no. 7
  • [Strategy for European Union foreign policy.]
  • 341.244
  • Titre de couverture
  • "Juin 2010"
  • Texte intégral
  • Aussi disponible en PDF format sur le site de : "Institute for Security Studies (EUISS)" (Adobe Acrobat Reader requis)
  • Notes bibliogr.
  • Executive summary Introduction Coherence and consistency in the EU's foreign policy A values-based foreign and security policy The coherence challenge: thinking beyond Lisbon CSDP : towards a comprehensive foreign policy Global governance The EU in a changing world Disarmament and non-proliferation Climate change International peace Building a European regional order A regional order : Europe and its close neighbours --The Balkans : from crisis management to enlargement The EU's eastern neighbourhood : integration without membership The Mediterranean : the need for a new policy Russia in Europe Consistent universalism Universalism and flexible regionalisation The Middle East : projecting a distinctive and credible voice Iran : multi-level engagement Africa : strategies and partnerships for long-term development Afghanistan and Pakistan : making the civilian approach work Giving substance to the strategic partnership EU strategic partnerships The United States China India Brazil
  • This 2010 report seeks to define what should be the basic guiding principles of EU foreign policy and how they should be applied in a set of priority areas. The Lisbon Treaty did not transform the European Union into a super-state. The ability to influence the international order depends on its ability to bring together the whole of the EU: the institutions, and the Member States, who remain decisive in foreign and security affairs, and to draw up a strategy for EU international policy to guide external action as a whole. The European Union remains essentially a civilian power that confines the use of force to the most exceptional circumstances and broad international legitimacy. Soft power, nonetheless, is real power. The Lisbon Treaty offers an opportunity for the European Union to take on a world role compatible with its status and aspirations. This implies that, in its own policy formulation and in all areas relating to international policy, the EU must act in accordance with three basic principles - autonomy, consistency and coherence - while striving to shape a multilateral world order
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