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ID144988
Title ProperChallenging the EU’s claim to moral authority
Other Title InformationRussian talk of ‘double standards’
LanguageENG
AuthorHeadley, James
Summary / Abstract (Note)Normative Power Europe is not just an academic concept: it is part of the self-understanding of many EU policymakers. They believe that the EU is setting standards of state behaviour in Europe and globally. The EU is regarded as an elaborator and epitomizer of European and ‘civilised’ values, as a model for other regions and states and as inherently an ethical actor. Russian policymakers reject these notions and, in doing so, increasingly accuse the EU of ‘double standards’, arguing that EU external action is inconsistent and does not always match its rhetoric; that the rhetoric therefore masks the pursuit of interests in its foreign policy; that the EU is like any other state (or state-like entity) and has no special claim to act ethically or to be a moral authority; and that internally, the EU does not live up to the values it seeks to impose on others. This article gives examples of Russian talk of EU double standards, analyses the motivations and assesses the likely impact. It argues that for such criticism to have any impact on EU policy, the critic must be seen as a moral equal, which the EU’s sense of moral superiority over Russia rules out.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Europe Journal Vol. 13, No.3; Sep 2015: p.297-307
Journal SourceAsia Europe Journal Vol: 13 No 3
Key WordsEU ;  EU Policy ;  Moral Authority ;  Normative Power Europe ;  Russian Talk ;  EU Policymakers ;  Russia - EU Talk


 
 
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