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ID074573
Title ProperIs there a security culture in the enlarged European Union?
LanguageENG
AuthorEdwards, Geoffrey
Publication2006.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The institutionalisation of security issues within the EU framework has allowed the central institutions, led especially by the High Representative, Javier Solana, and the departments attached to his office, to begin to establish a specifically European discourse on security, the threats posed to Europe and the principles that should underlie European reactions to them. The European Security Strategy agreed in 2003 has, in particular, provided a benchmark for European reactions and attracted constant references. That document, other declarations, and the growing number of EU missions within the framework of the EU's Security and Defence Policy allow for a dynamic interaction of discourse and practice. That dynamism, however, needs to be set against the EU's continuing under-achievement of its own declared defence capability goals, the existence of an alternative security discourse in NATO strongly enunciated by the United States and the continued dominance of national defence discourses.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Spectator Vol. 41, No. 3; Jul-Sep 2006: p7-23
Journal SourceInternational Spectator Vol: 41 No 3
Key WordsEuropean Union ;  Security Culture ;  EU's Security and Defence Policy