Description du produit
- Catégories: Développement, coopération et aide humanitaire
- Editeur: MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PRESS
- ISBN: 9780719062995
- Date de publication: 01/11/2009
- Reliure : Broché
- Nombre de page : 172
- Langue: Anglais
Résumé
It is increasingly recognised that EU development cooperation policy has failed to meet its stated aims. In this book, available for the first time in paperback, Arts and Dickson ask the obvious and important question: if the policy doesn’t work, why bother with it?
The authors assess why EU development policy has become largely ineffective, citing among the external causal factors the liberalisation of trade, and the growing influence of US and international actors such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund upon EU policy. It also considers contributing factors within the EU such as the enlargement of its membership and the resulting shifts in priorities.
It is this analysis of internal and external factors affecting the decline of EU development policy that makes this study both innovative and unique. It brings together an impressive range of contributors from different disciplines resulting in a thorough and intelligent assessment of the debate.
This study will appeal to advanced level undergraduates and academics of European politics in general, EU integration, development studies, and International Relations.
Table des matières
1. EU development cooperation, from model to symbol? – Karin Arts and Anna K. Dickson
2. From uniqueness to uniformity? An assessment of EU development aid policies – William Brown
3. The unimportance of trade preferences – Anna K. Dickson
4. The ACP in the European Union's network of regional relationships: Still unique or just one in the crowd? – Karen E. Smith
5. Changing european concerns: Security and complex political emergencies instead of development – Gorm Rye Olsen
6. Changing interests in EU development cooperation: The impact of EU membership and advancing integration – Karin Arts
7. ‘Sense and sensibility’: The role of France and French interests in European development policy since 1957 – Anne-Sophie Claeys
8. The commission and development policy: Bureaucratic politics in EU aid from the Lome Leap forward to the difficulties of adapting to the 21st century – Adrian Hewitt and Kaye Whiteman
9. Conclusions: The potential and limits of EU development cooperation policy – Karin Arts and Anna K. Dickson