European Security Governance - European Security Governance

SPERLING James A. , WAGNSSON Charlotte , HALLENBERG Jan

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Summary

This book focuses on the problems of, and prospects for, strengthening the global system of security governance in a manner consistent with the aspirations and practices of the EU. The EU approach to security governance has been successful in its immediate neighbourhood: it has successfully exported its preferred norms and principles to applicant countries, thereby 'pacifying' its immediate neighbourhood and making all of Europe more secure. The EU governance orientation ultimately seeks to enlarge the European security community and expand the geopolitical area within which armed conflicts are inconceivable, and where state and private actors converge around a set of norms and rules of behaviour and engagement. The EU's success along its immediate boundaries has not yet been replicated on a global scale; it remains an open question whether the EU system of governance can be exported globally, owing to different normative structures (for example, a tolerance of armed conflict or non-democratic governance internally), great-power competition (such as US--China), or ongoing processes of securitization that has made it difficult to find a commonly accepted definition of security. Moreover, the EU system of security governance clashes with the continuing unwillingness of other major powers to cede or pool sovereignty as well as varying preferences for unilateral as opposed to multilateral forms of statecraft. This edited volume addresses both the practical and political aspects of security governance and the barriers to the globalization of the EU system of security governance, particularly in the multipolar post-Cold War era. This book will be of great interest to students of security governance, EU politics, European Security and IR in general.

Table of contents

Introduction: Security Governance in a Westphalian World James Sperling Part 1: The Institutional Dimension of Security Governance: EU, NATO and the UN 1. Multilateral Security Governance: Comparing the UN and the EU Malena Britz and Hanna Ojanen 2. NATO’s Institutional Decline in Post-Cold War Security Governance Rafael Biermann 3. The EU in Global Security Governance: Lessons for Conceptual Development Arita Eriksson Part 2: Barriers and Opportunities to Security Governance: Recalcitrant Hegemon and Sectoral Resistance 4. Global Governance, Security Governance and an Imperious United States Andrew L. Ross 5. Unilateral Endeavours Challenging Governance in the Energy Sector Bertil Nygren 6. Children and Post-Conflict Security Governance Alison Watson Conclusion: Farewell Westphalia? The Prospects of EU Security Governance Charlotte Wagnsson and Jan Hallenberg