ABSTRACT

This book examines the effectiveness of multilateralism in ensuring collective security and, in particular, the EU’s role in this process.

In 1992, shortly after the end of the Cold War, a Security Council Summit in New York reaffirmed the salience of the system of collective security and stated the determination of the Heads of State to maintain it as the prime international instrument for preserving peace. Twenty years later, however, the record of collective security as well as of multilateralism has not been very encouraging. The system of collective security, as enshrined in the United Nations (UN) Charter, failed repeatedly to accomplish its mandate in the 1990s and has led to controversial debates in the United States and Europe that reached a climax during the Iraq crisis in 2002/03.

The volume draws upon both theoretical and empirical research to answer the following core questions:

  • What are the reasons that have made multilateralism either effective or ineffective in the field of peacekeeping, peace preservation and peacebuilding?
  • How can multilateralism be made more effective?
  • How can attempts made by Europe to render UN multilateralism in the security area more efficient be assessed?

This book will be of much interest to students of peacebuilding/peacekeeping, EU policy, the UN, security studies and IR in general.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Effectiveness of multilateralism in the field of collective security

part |62 pages

Theoretical approaches to and historical developments of global governance in the field of collective security

part |55 pages

International peacebuilding and state-building

chapter |20 pages

International peacebuilding and state-building efforts

How effective have they been?

chapter |24 pages

Building peace in post-conflict environments

Why and how the UN and the EU interact

chapter |10 pages

Constructing a framework of effective multilateralism

Conclusions for the field of collective security