This volume brings together senior practitioners and academic specialists to consider how the EU’s new foreign policy has been evolving and how the various actors are maintaining the holistic approach intended by the draftsmen of the 2009 Lisbon Treaty.
Inhoudsopgave
Chapter 1. Introduction: The European Union’s New Foreign Policy.- Part One: Over-Arching Issues.- Chapter 2. Championing Multilateralism.- Chapter 3. The Positive Narrative on Human Rights.- Chapter 4. Values and Interests in Post-Lisbon European Union Foreign Policy.- Chapter 5. Working Together for a Safer World.- Chapter 6. Trade in Turbulent Times.- Chapter 7. The growing role of the European Parliament as an EU foreign policy actor.- Chapter 8. A cultural superpower? The European Union’s venture in cultural diplomacy.- Chapter 9. Creating and Managing a New Diplomatic Service.- Part Two: Some New Geo-Political Challenges.- Chapter 10. Looking After the Neighbourhood.- Chapter 11. The ‘Pivot’ to Africa.- Chapter 12. The European Union’s Northern Window – A New View on the World.- Part Three: Some New Policy Challenges.- Chapter 13. The European Union’s New Climate Change Diplomacy: innovating in foreign policy.- Chapter 14. When technology becomes geopolitics– the EU’s response to cyber threats.- Part Four: Conclusions.- Chapter 15. Conclusions: The European Union’s Post-Lisbon Foreign Policy Ten Years On.- Afterward: The European Union’s New Foreign Policy: A Glass Half-Full?
Over de auteur
Martin Westlake is a visiting professor at the European Institute of the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), UK, and at the College of Europe, Belgium. He was David Davies of Llandinam Research Fellow in the Department of International Relations, LSE, 2018-2019.