ABSTRACT

The end of the Cold War presented a major challenge to Western Europe and to the European Union. It led not only to a whole new set of countries seeking to join the EU, but also to a strong demand for a more intensive EU engagement in the broader regional context. This book assesses whether the EU has successfully faced up to this challenge and has adapted its policies towards its immediate neighbourhood in a coherent and strategic manner.

This volume examines EU policy from all its major regional dimensions including assessments of:

* the enlargement process to East Central Europe
* the increasing engagement of the EU in conflict resolution, most notably in the Balkans, but also in the Arab-Israeli conflict
* policies towards the countries of the former Soviet Union, such as Russia, Ukraine and the Caucasus
* the complexities of EU policy towards Turkey and the Middle East
* the transatlantic dimensions of the EU's neighbourhood policies.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Setting the framework

chapter |15 pages

The EU and its changing neighbourhood

Stabilization, integration and partnership

chapter |21 pages

Strategy with fast-moving targets

East-Central Europe

chapter |14 pages

The EU and Turkey

Between geopolitics and social engineering

chapter |17 pages

South-Eastern Europe

The expanding EU role

chapter |20 pages

The Northern Dimension

A presence and four liabilities?

chapter |17 pages

The Caucasus and Central Asia

Towards a non-strategy

chapter |16 pages

North Africa

Partnership, exceptionalism and neglect

chapter |19 pages

The Middle East

Towards a substantive European role in the peace process?

chapter |17 pages

Conclusion

Towards a neighbourhood strategy?