ABSTRACT

Foreign Policies of EU Member States provides a clear and current overview of the motivations and outcomes of EU Member States regarding their foreign policy-making within and beyond the EU. It provides an in-depth analysis of intra-EU policy-making and sheds light, in an innovative and understandable way, on the lesser-known aspects of the inter-EU and extra-EU foreign policies of the twenty-eight Member States. The text has an innovative method of thematic organisation in which case study state profiles emerge via dominant foreign policy themes. The text examines the three main policy challenges currently faced by the twenty-eight Member States:

  • First, EU Member States must cooperate within the mechanisms of the EU, including the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP).
  • Second, EU Member States continue to construct their own inter-EU foreign policies.
  • Third, the sovereign prerogative exercised by all EU Member States is to construct their own foreign policies on everything from trade and defence with the rest of the world.

This combination of clarity, thematic structure and empirical case studies make this an ideal textbook for all upper-level students of European foreign policy, comparative European politics and European studies.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Conceptualising the foreign policies of EU Member States

part I|78 pages

Geographic orientations/geopolitics

chapter 2|13 pages

Western EU Member States foreign policy geo-orientations

UK, Ireland and the Benelux

chapter 4|17 pages

France and Germany

The European Union’s ‘central’ Member States

chapter 5|16 pages

Southern Europe

Portugal, Spain, Italy, Malta, Greece, Cyprus 1

part II|180 pages

Foreign policy dimensions

chapter 6|14 pages

Foreign policy and diplomacy

chapter 7|16 pages

Security and defence

chapter 9|15 pages

Enlarging the European Union

Member State preferences and institutional dynamics

chapter 10|18 pages

European energy policy

chapter 12|17 pages

Development

Shallow Europeanisation? 1

chapter 14|15 pages

National aims and adaptation

Lessons from the market

chapter 15|16 pages

The EU in the world

From multilateralism to global governance

chapter 16|16 pages

Conclusion