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Increasingly geopolitical: EU’s eastern neighbourhood in the age of multiple crises

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posted on 2020-03-16, 09:38 authored by Cristian NitoiuCristian Nitoiu
The recent decade has marked the increasing emergence of disorder in the neighbourhood of the European Union (EU). South of its borders, the Arab spring or the migrant crises have underlined the vulnerabilities of the EU to a whole host of exogenous threats. The Ukraine crisis has made both the EU and Russia reconsider the geopolitics of their shared neighbourhood. This chapter contends that the Ukraine crisis has moved relations between the EU and Russia from geopolitical competition to geopolitical conflict, a process which has been primarily played out in the eastern neighbourhood. Moreover, the chapter shows that the move from geopolitical competition to geopolitical conflict has been primarily caused by a breakdown in the post-Cold War pattern of mutual recognition of the status-seeking efforts of Russia and the EU. The chapter also contends that the increase in geopolitics has prompted the EU to build its resilience towards external development in the eastern neighbourhood.

History

School

  • Loughborough University London

Published in

Resilience and the EU's Eastern Neighbourhood Countries: From Theoretical Concepts to a Normative Agenda

Pages

25 - 47

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© The Author

Publisher statement

This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of a chapter published in Resilience and the EU's Eastern Neighbourhood Countries: From Theoretical Concepts to a Normative Agenda. The final authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25606-7_2.

Publication date

2019-11-22

Copyright date

2019

ISBN

9783030256067; 9783030256050

Language

  • en

Editor(s)

Gilles Rouet, Gabriela Pascariu

Depositor

Dr Cristian Nitoiu. Deposit date: 12 March 2020

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