Security-building in the Mediterranean after September 11

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Series Details Vol.8, No.2-3, Summer-Autumn 2003, p1-20
Publication Date June 2003
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Article is part of a special issue on Euro-Mediterranean relations after September 11.

Article abstract:

The collection of articles introduced in this first contribution sets out to analyse the development of politics in the Mediterranean against the background of a paradigmatically changing international environment. It embarks on the hypothesis that September 11 has resulted in a worrying tendency to securitise international terrorism. The concept of securitisation legitimises the fight against a vital threat by recourse to all possible means, including the breaking of existing rules. This is perceived as worrying because it undermines pivotal factors for security building, such as the rule of international law, respect for human rights and democracy. Empirical research verifies that since September 11, what were already weak processes of democratisation in the Mediterranean have been damaged by the irresponsible depreciation of binding rules. However, since Mediterranean politics have always been determined by the interrelations of international, regional and domestic dynamics, these have to be taken into consideration too. The Al-Aksa Intifada, the change of political elites in some Arab countries, the evolution of a unilateral European Security and Defence Policy, and the process of EU enlargement all have their own political impact. Security building in the Mediterranean needs to be analysed in the context of these highly interrelated developments.

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