ID | 112768 |
Title Proper | Between knowledge and power |
Other Title Information | epistemic communities and the emergence of security sector reform in the EU security architecture |
Language | ENG |
Author | Faleg, Giovanni |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article provides a theoretically informed analysis to understand why and how security sector reform (SSR) norms have been integrated into the European Union (EU) security architecture. It investigates the role of epistemic communities in advancing the security-development/good governance agenda underpinning SSR and in fostering institutional learning. Shared knowledge and expertise have driven policy and institutional change, since they yielded a new policy consensus that transformed the EU's approach to security in the post-cold war international system. Empirical findings, based on content analysis and on 25+ semi-structured interviews, suggest that transnational expertise-based networks did play a leading role in shaping SSR conceptual development. However, they also show that cleavages between epistemic communities across the security/development dividing line are ultimately responsible for the EU's failure to achieve a coherent SSR policy implementation. Moreover, the article concludes that the institutionalisation of SSR in the EU did not originate in a single norm setter, nor in sheer ideational stimulus. Change occurred through the complex interplay between ideas and interests, that is between knowledge and power, leading specific norms to be visualised as consensual and dominant. |
`In' analytical Note | European Security Vol. 21, No.2; Jun 2012: p.161-184 |
Journal Source | European Security Vol. 21, No.2; Jun 2012: p.161-184 |
Key Words | Epistemic Communities ; European Union Common Security and Defence Policy ; Security Sector Reform |