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EU EXTERNAL GOVERNANCE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   089891


Changing Belarus: The Limits of EU governance in Eastern Europe and the promise of partnership / Bose, Giselle; Korosteleve-Polglase, Elena   Journal Article
Bose, Giselle Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Since the end of the Cold War, European Union (EU) efforts in transforming Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) have been enormously successful. The 2004 enlargement is widely regarded as the single most effective foreign policy strategy in the Union's history, and the recent European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) was designed to repeat that success in countries located on the EU's new Eastern borders. Although the ENP has been the subject of substantive discussion in European academia, Belarus is the one country in Eastern Europe that has largely escaped scholarly attention.
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2
ID:   178001


Regional security cooperation revisited: the Western Balkans as the future security provider / Klemenc, Jelka; Hrabalek, Martin ; DorÄ‘evic, Vladimir   Journal Article
Klemenc, Jelka Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In this article, we offer a fresh look at the Western Balkans by addressing EU external governance with respect to a regional security cooperation perspective as a major EU external governance venue. We analyse how the said cooperation represents a positive example of EU rule transfer by paying attention to the results and to the level of regional ownership in the EU-Western Balkans security engagement. We pay tribute to the existing research on the EU external governance model with respect to regional cooperation and security and build our arguments by extending the said model. The said analysis represents the basis for our claims that the region has transformed from a consumer (of European security) into a security provider. Hence, the Western Balkans has witnessed an EU-induced security framework allowing it to build its capabilities and experience towards finding a more efficient role in the European security system and its governance. We aim to establish a basis for rethinking the concept of the EU-Western Balkans engagement from the Justice and Home Affairs perspective as the core element of what is described in EU strategic documents as EU external governance, outlining a more symmetric relationship between Brussels and the region.
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