1st Edition

The EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy The Quest for Democracy

Edited By Helene Sjursen Copyright 2012
    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book reorients the study of European foreign and security policy towards the question of democracy. Blending insights from international relations and democratic theory, it aims to enhance our understanding of the issues at stake. The main structures, the institutional setting and the procedures that govern decision-making in this domain are examined. In this way, the book supplements studies with a more traditional focus on the substance of foreign policy. What are the democratic challenges in this distinct field of policy-making?

    The Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) of the European Union (EU) is usually assumed to be intergovernmental. Contributors to this book examine the extent to which a move beyond intergovernmentalism has taken place, how this manifests itself, and what may be the democratic implications. While the EU’s international outlook testifies to a quest for democracy, the institutions and procedures that govern decision-making are found wanting.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Journal of European Public Policy.

    1. INTRODUCTION, The EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy: The Quest for Democracy, Helene Sjursen, ARENA – Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo

    2. Not so Intergovernmental After All? On Democracy and Integration in European Foreign and Security Policy, Helene Sjursen, ARENA – Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo

    3. Invisible and Unaccountable? National Representatives and Council Officials in EU Foreign Policy, Ana E. Juncos and Karolina Pomorska, University of Bristol / University of Maastricht

    4. The EU as a Community of Practice: Foreign-policy Communications in the COREU Network, Federica Bicchi, London School of Economics

    5. The Political Theory and Practice of Parliamentary Participation in the Common Security and Defence Policy, Christopher Lord, ARENA – Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo

    6. A Contradiction in Terms? NGOs, Democracy, and European Foreign and Security Policy, Jutta Joachim and Matthias Dembinski, Leibniz Universität Hannover / Peace Research Institute, Framkfurt

    7. Governance between Expertise and Democracy: The Case of European Security, Erik Oddvar Eriksen, ARENA – Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo

    8. Democratic Foundations of EU Foreign Policy: Narratives and the Myth of EU Exceptionalism, Ben Tonra, UCD School of Politics and International Relations, Dublin

    Biography

    Helene Sjursen is Professor at ARENA – Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo, Norway, she has been at ARENA since 1997. Her main fields of academic interest include the EU as an international actor, EU's foreign and security policy and EU enlargement.