The role of the European Union in global politics has been of
growing interest over the past decade. The EU is a key player in
global institutions such as the World Trade Organization (WTO) and
NATO. It continues to construct an emerging identity and project
its values and interests throughout contemporary international
relations. The capacity of the EU to both formulate and realise its
goals, however, remains contested. Some scholars claim the EU's
soft power? attitude rivals that of the USA's hard power? approach
to international relations. Others view the EU as insufficiently
able to produce a co-ordinated position to project upon global
politics. Regardless of the position taken within this debate, the
EU's relationship with its external partners has an increasingly
important impact upon economic, political and security concerns on
an international level. Trade negotiations, military interventions,
democracy promotion, international development and responses to the
global economic crisis have all witnessed the EU playing a central
role. This has seen the EU become both a major force in
contemporary institutions of global governance and a template for
supranational governance that might influence other attempts to
construct regional and global institutions.
This volume brings together a collection of leading EU scholars
to provide a state-of-the-art overview covering these and other
debates relating to the EU's role in contemporary global
governance. The Handbook is divided into four main sections:
Part I: European studies and global governance ? provides an
overview and critical assessment of the leading theoretical
approaches through which the EU's role in global governance has
been addressed within the literature.
Part II: Institutions ? examines the role played by the key EU
institutions in pursuing a role for the EU in contemporary
international relations.
Part III: Policy and issue areas ? explores developments within
particular policy sectors, assessing the different impact that the
EU has had in different issue areas, including foreign and security
policy, environmental policy, common commercial policy, the Common
Agricultural Policy, development policy, accession policy, the
Neighbourhood Policy and conflict transformation.
Part IV: The global multilevel governance complex and the EU ?
focuses on the relationship between the EU and the institutions,
regions and countries with which it forms a global multilevel
governance complex, including chapters on the EU's relationship
with the WTO, United Nations, East Asia, Africa and the USA.
The editors are Jens-Uwe Wunderlich (Aston University) and David
J. Bailey (University of Birmingham). Jens-Uwe Wunderlich's
research and teaching focuses on international relations theory,
European integration and globalization and on comparative
regionalism; he has recently published Regionalism, Globalisation
and International Order?Europe and Southeast Asia (Ashgate) and A
Dictionary of Globalization (Routledge, 2007). David Bailey has
published on trends in European governance in the Journal of
European Public Policy, Comparative European Politics, and Journal
of European Social Policy.
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