ABSTRACT

This title was fist published in 2000:  A fresh and original study of EU and NATO enlargement, which sets both in a comparative context and considers them against a backdrop of the evolution of a pan-European security community. The book is divided into two parts. In part one the authors examine and discuss the EU and NATO enlargement processes and the ’incremental linkage’ which has developed between them. The major issues and challenges facing the two institutions as they ponder the next steps in enlargement are also assessed. Part two includes separate chapters on the post-Cold War evolution of the EU and NATO overall. These discussions focus on their strengths and limitations in contributing to the broader and more co-operative kind of European security which the end of the Cold War makes possible. The final chapters examine a number of possible scenarios under which the EU and NATO either succeed or fail in contributing significantly to the development of a new European security order.

chapter 1|19 pages

The EU and NATO after the Cold War

chapter 3|33 pages

Beyond the Amsterdam and Madrid Summits

chapter 4|36 pages

NATO’s Changing Roles

chapter 5|28 pages

The EU and the Challenge of Enlargement

chapter 6|26 pages

A Bigger and a Better Europe?