ABSTRACT

There is a widespread belief that the European Union (EU) is a novel kind

of power not only in its own institutional set-up but also in its external

relations. It is said to rely on civilian rather than military means and to

pursue the spread of particular norms rather than self-interested geo-

graphical expansion or military superiority. In the 1970s, Franc¸ois Ducheˆne

called it a ‘civilian power’ (1972: 43); in the early 2000s it was argued that

the label ‘normative power’ would be better suited (Manners 2000, 2002).

Just as Ducheˆne’s civilian power reflected the Cold War milieu of the 1970s, the normative-power approach signified a crystallisation of the EU in the

post-Cold War era.