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ID095178
Title ProperEU and Southeastern Europe
Other Title Informationthe rise of post-liberal governance
LanguageENG
AuthorChandler, David
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article suggests that EU governance in Southeastern Europe reproduces a discourse in which the failures and problems which have emerged, especially in relation to the pace of integration and the sustainability of peace in candidate member states such as Bosnia-Herzegovina, have merely reinforced the EU's external governance agenda. On the one hand, the limitations of reform have reinforced the EU's projection of its power as a civilising mission into what is perceived to be a dangerous vacuum in the region. On the other hand, through the discourse of post-liberal governance, the EU seeks to avoid the direct political responsibilities associated with this power. Rather than legitimise policy making on the basis of representative legitimacy, post-liberal frameworks of governance problematise autonomy and self-government, inverting the liberal paradigm through establishing administrative and regulatory frameworks as prior to democratic choices. This process tends to distance policy making from representative accountability, weakening the legitimacy of governing institutions in Southeastern European states which have international legal sovereignty but lack genuine mechanisms for politically integrating society.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol. 31, No.1; 2010: p.69 - 85
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol. 31, No.1; 2010: p.69 - 85
Key WordsEuropean Union ;  Southeastern Europe ;  Post - Liberal Governance ;  Bosnia - Herzegovina


 
 
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