ABSTRACT

This book examines how the different normative foundations of conflict resolution held by various global actors, their understandings of justice, and the differences between types of conflict influence the varying means by which conflicts can be prevented, managed, and ultimately resolved.

By combining insights from political theory, conflict studies, and European Union (EU) foreign policy studies, the book identifies the EU as the key case of a conflict manager that is both a product and a defender of a global liberal order. It focuses on three aspects of conflict resolution that pose their own sets of both normative and empirical dilemmas: resolving border disputes; strengthening the resilience of weak or divided states and societies after regime change, and intervention in humanitarian crises. Furthermore, it offers a comparative analysis between a potentially distinctive European approach and that of other global actors and reflects critically on situations where policy practice may not always reflect a concern for justice, asking what countervailing forces prevail and why.

This book will be of key interest to scholars and students in European and EU Studies, Area studies, Conflict Resolution, War Studies, EU Foreign Policy Political Theory, International relations as well as policymakers.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

part I|84 pages

Resolving and managing border disputes

chapter 182|16 pages

Recognition, reproduction, transformation

The use and abuse of international justice in the Cyprus conflict

chapter 4|24 pages

Between border dispute and ethnic conflict

The EU as a just mediator in the Serbia-Kosovo stalemate

part II|119 pages

Resolving and managing regime changes and power vacuums