The European Union and Everyday Statebuilding: The Case of Kosovo
English
By (author): Ramadan Ilazi
This book examines the European Unions everyday statebuilding practices, using the case of Kosovo as an example of how it uses informal practices to influence local actors.
The objective of the book is to explain how the EU operates as a statebuilding actor in the everyday context, outside its zone of comfort. It illustrates the EUs dynamics of dealing with the local actors through everyday practices, which are understood as informal means or practices of interaction with the local actors in the framework of three key issues of relevance for statebuilding process for the EU: rule of law, reforming public administration and resolving bilateral disputes. The book shows how the EU utilizes everyday practices to influence decision-making process on the part of the government in order to ensure a particular outcome, be that diffusing a norm or promoting its own interests; in doing so, it gives an important insight into what these interests actually are in practice. In providing an insight into how the EU works as a statebuilding actor in practice in the everyday context, it unmasks factors that facilitate the EUs influence on other countries that it considers to be ailing, such as Kosovo, in order to secure desired behaviours, decisions, and actions on the part of the local government. It also unmasks the EUs commitment to being an ethical actor by unearthing practices that undermine local agency, the practical intentions of the EUs statebuilding intervention approaches, and the reality that hides behind the façade of public statements on the part of the EU and the local government. In doing so, the book provides a new way to look at the EU as a statebuilding actor.
This book will be of interest to students of statebuilding, EU policy, Balkan politics and, International Relations.
See moreWill deliver when available. Publication date 18 Dec 2024