Intercultural Dialogue in EU Foreign Policy

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A01=Pietro de Perini
Arab Uprisings
Author_Pietro de Perini
Barcelona Process
Category=JP
Civil Society
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
EU Action
EU External
EU External Relation
EU Foreign
EU Foreign Policy
EU Foreign Policy Make
EU intercultural policy evolution
EU Official
EU Policy
EU Policy Maker
EU Policy Response
EU Priority
EU Promotion
EU's Desire
EU's International Action
Euro-Mediterranean relations
Euro-Mediterranean Space
Euromed Audiovisual
Euromed Civil Forum
Euromed Heritage
Euromed Youth
European Neighbourhood Policy
EU’s Desire
EU’s International Action
foreign policy analysis
FPA Approach
migration and social tensions
regional conflict resolution
religious fundamentalism studies
Socio-economic Development

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032178929
  • Weight: 322g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book provides an original, rigorous and theoretically-grounded investigation into varying EU efforts to advance intercultural dialogue (ICD) in the framework of its foreign policy towards the Mediterranean during the period 1990-2014. From the end of the Cold War, the EU has increasingly invested in both rhetoric and resources on ICD promotion. In spite of this commitment, the EU has never offered a clear and permanent understanding of what this concept entails and has been actually aimed at. By adopting a FPA standpoint and approaching ICD as one of the foreign policy instruments developed by the EU to address the relations with its Mediterranean partners, this book exposes the causes and the modalities of the contradictory development of this relevant and long standing element of EU foreign policy.

De Perini investigates change and continuity in the promotion of this tool, and provides in-depth knowledge of what ICD has actually meant for the EU: from the development and launch of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership or Barcelona Process, to the revision of the European Neighbourhood Policy following the Arab uprisings. The book shows that the EU’s advancement of ICD in its foreign policy has gone through three distinct phases: ‘emergence’ (1990-2001), ‘consolidation’ (2001-2010) and ‘professionalisation’ (2010-2014). Empirically the book provides the first comprehensive and integrative analysis of all aspects of EU efforts to promote ICD.

The book exposes a series of trends, limits and contradictions of EU foreign policy which are increasingly relevant today. In particular, it shows that over the last twenty-five years, the EU has addressed a set of persistent challenges characterising its relations with Mediterranean countries and people, namely challenges connected to regional conflicts, religious fundamentalisms, xenophobic attitudes towards Arab/Muslim migrants and related social tensions. As these challenges are still major issues in the current EU agenda and in the broader debate about EU foreign policy, this book provides rich and original empirical knowledge to an understanding of how the EU has decided to address these phenomena at different moments of its recent history.

Pietro de Perini is a Research Fellow at the Human Rights Centre in the University of Padova, Italy. He is among the editors of the Italian Yearbook of Human Rights.

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