Union for the Mediterranean

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barcelona
Barcelona Process
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Eastern EU Member State
energy cooperation Mediterranean
Energy Policy
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EU Approach
EU Energy Policy
EU foreign policy
EU Government
EU Internal Market
EU Israeli Relation
EU Mediterranean
EU Member State
EU Policy
EU Presidency
EU's Economic Policy
EU's Mediterranean Policy
EU's Southern Neighbour
Euro-Arab relations
euro-mediterranean
Euro-Mediterranean policy reform
Euro-Mediterranean Relations
european
EU’s Economic Policy
EU’s Mediterranean Policy
EU’s Southern Neighbour
German Government
Middle East peace process
Middle East Peacemaking
neighbourhood
partner
partnership
policies
policy
process
regime change analysis
regional integration studies
relations
Rotate EU Presidency
Small EU Member State
SME Finance
Turkey's EU Membership Prospect
Turkey’s EU Membership Prospect
UfM Secretariat
Western Sahara

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138377240
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Aug 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This is the first comprehensive analysis of the Union for the Mediterranean (UfM), launched in 2008 amid great controversy within the European Union. Affected from the start by negative fallout from the failure of Middle East peace initiatives, its inadequacies have been underlined by the popular movement for regime change in the Arab world.

Leading experts provide here the first integrated analysis of the significance and shortcomings of the UfM. Beginning with critical questioning of the motives and institutional logics informing this venture, the collection proceeds to analyse its key actors, as well as major policy dossiers such as energy and development.

The book explains how and why an initiative aiming to depoliticize Euro-Mediterranean relations in fact proved wide open to political discord, bringing huge disruption to UfM activity. While some aspects are found to have merit, the volume is critical of the way in which EU Mediterranean policy became driven by a narrow range of national interests, lost sight of the political objectives of the preceding Barcelona Process and became overwhelmingly bilateral in approach, at the expense of more ambitious region-building efforts.

It concludes by highlighting the need to reform the EU Mediterranean policy framework in the light of the Arab uprisings of 2011.

This book was published as a special issue of Mediterranean Politics.

Federica Bicchi is Lecturer in International Relations of Europe at the London School of Economics. Richard Gillespie is Professor of Politics at the University of Liverpool and founding editor of Mediterranean Politics.