The European Union and the Libyan crisis
This article investigates the European Union (EU)’s answer to the Libya crisis of 2011 to show the unresolved dilemmas of an intergovernmental approach to foreign and defence policies. The Lisbon Treaty has institutionalized a dual constitution or decision-making regime: supranational for the polici...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International politics (Hague, Netherlands) Netherlands), 2014-03, Vol.51 (2), p.177-195 |
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description | This article investigates the European Union (EU)’s answer to the Libya crisis of 2011 to show the unresolved dilemmas of an intergovernmental approach to foreign and defence policies. The Lisbon Treaty has institutionalized a dual constitution or decision-making regime: supranational for the policies of the single market, and intergovernmental for the policies traditionally at the core of national sovereignty, such as foreign and defence policies. In the most significant test for the EU foreign and defence policies in the post-Lisbon era, the intergovernmental approach generated unsatisfactory outcomes because it was unable to solve structural and institutional problems of collective action. Without revising the intergovernmental constitution, it will be difficult for the EU as an actor to play a role in international politics in the future. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1057/ip.2014.2 |
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subjects | Collective Action Constitutions Councils Decision Making Defence policy Defense Policy Development Studies Dilemmas Europe European Union Foreign Policy International Political Economy International Relations Libya Original Article Political Science Political Science and International Relations Political Science and International Studies Politics Sovereignty State Role Treaties Treaty of Lisbon |
title | The European Union and the Libyan crisis |
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