Learning to Talk the Talk: Re-Appraising the External Perspective in the EUs Foreign Policy

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Abstract

How can the European Union (EU) remain a relevant and effective power in a multipolar world? Past studies have sought to address such questions through a focus on the internal constraints the EU faces in its foreign policy. Instead we propose leaving the beaten path by stressing the need for a stronger inclusion of the external perspective in the EU's foreign policy. This need, we argue, becomes increasingly important in a multipolar world as peripheral countries find themselves in a position to side by whichever power presents the most interesting proposition. In a case study on the EU's relations with Kazakhstan we will demonstrate in more detail how the presence of (re-)emerging powers brings new challenges to the front for the EU. Challenges which can best be dealt with by having a good knowledge about what attracts or detracts.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)296-322
JournalCEU Political Science Journal
Volume8
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2013

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