EU Democracy Promotion in the Mediterranean: Cooperation against All Odds?

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

Authors

Focusing on the Euro-Mediterranean relations since the early 1990s, this paper investigates in how far the EU has been able to shape its relations with third countries according to its democracy promotion policy. The paper traces the evolution of the EU’s provisions for democracy promotion and compares the
implementation of political dialogue and democracy assistance with seven (semi-)authoritarian regimes (Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Syria, and Tunisia) since the early 1990s. A clear regional trend to more intensive cooperation lends credibility to the claim that the EU possesses a certain agenda setting power in international relations. A systematic comparison across countries and over time explores the explanatory power of interdependence, political liberalisation, and statehood for the remaining country variation. The paper finds that the degree of political liberalisation in target countries is the most important scope condition for cooperation in the field of democracy promotion and points to the need of further investigating (domestic) factors to account for the EU’s differential ‘normative power’ in international relations.
Translated title of the contributionEU Demokratieförderung im Mittelmeerraum: Kooperation entgegen aller Erwartungen?
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationBerlin
PublisherFreie Universität Berlin
Number of pages31
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009
Externally publishedYes

Documents

DOI