To Be or Not to Be a Normative Power:The EU’s Promotion of Human Rights and Democracy in Russia

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Series Details No.2, September 2013
Publication Date September 2013
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Abstract:
The ‘Normative Power Europe’ debate has been a leitmotif in the academic discourse for over a decade. Far from being obsolete, the topic is as relevant as when the term was first coined by Ian Manners in 2002. ‘To be or not to be a normative power’ is certainly one of the existential dilemmas in the foreign policy of the European Union.

This paper, however, intends to move beyond the black-and-white debate on whether the European Union is a normative power and to make it more nuanced by examining the factors that make it such.

Contrary to the conventional perception that the European Union is a necessarily ‘benign’ force in the world, it assumes that it has aspirations to be a viable international actor. Consequently, it pursues different types of foreign policy behaviour with a varying degree of normativity in them.

The paper addresses the question of under what conditions the European Union is a ‘normative power’. The findings of the study demonstrate that the ‘normative power’ of the European Union is conditioned upon internal and external elements, engaged in a complex interaction with a decisive role played by the often neglected external elements.

Source Link https://www.coleurope.eu/system/files_force/research-paper/brigg_2_2013_daskalova.pdf?download=1
Related Links
College of Europe: Study: Bruges Regional Integration & Global Governance Papers https://www.coleurope.eu/website/study/eu-international-relations-and-diplomacy-studies/research-activities/bruges-regional

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