Contenu du sommaire : A la recherche de la politique étrangère européenne

Revue Politique européenne Mir@bel
Numéro N°17, automne 2005
Titre du numéro A la recherche de la politique étrangère européenne
Texte intégral en ligne Accessible sur l'internet
  • A la recherche de la politique étrangère européenne

    • La politique étrangère européenne en débats - Bastien Irondelle et Franck Petiteville p. 5 accès libre
    • Return of the jedi : Realism and the Study of the European Union - Sten Rynning p. 11 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      Many observers of European Union affairs discard the theory of Realism in the belief that this “crude” theory of sovereignty and conflict cannot grasp the “sophisticated” politics of dialogue and compromise in the EU. However, this rejection is based more on a false stereotypical view of Realism than on the insights generated by real Realism. In consequence, the purpose of this article is two-fold: to debunk the stereotype, and to outline strengths and weaknesses in the Realist research agenda.
    • ESDP : A Fourth System of European Foreign Policy - Britz et Arita Eriksson p. 35 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      The development of defence activities related to the European Union has been rapid since the end of the Cold War. The creation of the European Defence Agency (EDA) in 2004 might contribute to greater coherence in the Union's defence related activities. This article investigates the development that has enabled the creation of the EDA and what these developments mean to the study of European foreign policy. The authors argue - in opposition to Brian White (2001) - that defence should, by 2005, at least be seen as a fourth sub-system of European foreign policy.
    • Beyond the civilian power EU debate - Karen Smith p. 63 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      This article argues that the European Union is no longer a civilian power; instead it finds itself, like almost every other international actor on the planet, somewhere along a spectrum between two ideal-types of civilian and military power. But instead of debating what the European Union is (civilian power or not), we should move beyond this to analyse and debate what the EU does in international relations. The article suggests a few lines of enquiry to open that debate.
    • Where and Why does the EU Impose Sanctions ? - Clara Portela p. 83 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      This article explores whether the EU behaves differently as a sanctioning actor towards its geographic vicinity than to regions further afield. It looks at the security relevance of the objectives advanced by sanctions, as well as the interplay between objectives and the geographic proximity of the targets to the EU in its autonomous sanctions practice (1987-2003). It identifies a pattern of geographic differentiation: Eastern Europe has been targeted for the widest variety of reasons, while in the Southern Mediterranean the only focus has been on terrorism. In Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa most sanctions have been geared towards the promotion of democracy and Human Rights.
    • Europeanisation of Foreign Policy in EU Member and Cadidate Countries. A Comparative Study of Greek and Turkish Cases ? - Özlem Terzi p. 113 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      This paper analyses the processes of Europeanisation of foreign policy in EU member and candidate countries and focuses on their comparison through the Greek and Turkish examples. It firstly presents a theoretical framework on the concept of Europeanisation with respect to the foreign policy realm in the EU. The paper, secondly, differentiates between the Europeanisation processes of foreign policy in EU member and candidate countries, and argues that these two processes can be compared by analysing Greek and Turkish foreign policies towards each other since 1999, when Turkey was declared as a candidate country to the EU. The Turkish and Greek cases are, thus, taken as mirror examples of the Europeanisation processes in EU member and candidate country foreign policies. The paper concludes the result of such a comparison is that these processes in member and candidate countries bear more similarities than differences.
    • Vers des compétences externes : l'activisme de la Commission européenne en matière d'aviation civile. - Cornelia Woll p. 137 accès libre avec résumé
      Pour analyser le rôle joué par la Commission dans les politiques étrangères européennes, nous montrons comment la Commission peut élargir ses compétences en utilisant ses droits en tant que gardienne des traités. L'étude de cas de la politique européenne en matière d'aviation internationale illustre comment la Commission a pu obtenir un mandat de négociation externe que les Etats membres lui avaient auparavant refusé. Pour cela la Commission s'est appuyée sur des recours juridictionnels et a employé une stratégie cognitive qui inscrit la question de l'aviation civile dans la concurrence avec les Etats-Unis. Par ces deux moyens, la Commission a su changer les préférences des Etats membres et réorienter le point focal des négociations intergouvernementales.
    • EU Trade Policy and Social Clause : A Question of Competence ? - Jan. Orbie, Hendrick. Vos et Lisbeth. Taverniers p. 159 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      After describing Europe's position on a social clause since the seventies, this article highlight the relevance of the competence dimension for explaining Europe's (in)capacity to export core labour standards through its trade regime. We argue that the vertical integration cleavage in EU politics sheds light on Europe's evolving stance and on the difficulties to reach a clear and common position on a social clause. The article illustrates how this proposal runs up against the limits of further European integration in both the external trade (trade-related issues) and the internal social (community role in ILO labour standards) domains.
  • Agenda

    - p. 189
  • Recherches en cours

  • Auteurs

    - p. 201