posted on 2011-02-22, 09:46authored byAlan Hardacre
The post-Cold War era has seen a restructuring of the institutions of global governance
and an intensification of international relations, to which one of the most important
responses has been a reinvigoration of regionalism and regionalisation. The proliferation
of regionalism has led to increased relations between regional groups in different world
regions, and the EU has been central to the development of this new interregional
phenomenon. This thesis sets out to test the theory of interregionalism by looking at how
the EU has strategically pursued interregionalism, and at how this has subsequently
worked in practice. To best achieve this objective the thesis develops a more
sophisticated framework of analysis; complex interregionalism. This framework allows
for a detailed investigation of how the EU has simultaneously engaged in bilateral and
interregional relations in Latin America. The thesis explores the tensions between
interregionalism as a strategy and interregionalism in action, principally by drawing
lessons from the EU's relations with Latin America, and Mercosur in particular. The
most general foundation for this analysis is the study of International Political Economy
(IPE), particularly the extensive literature on regional integration and the emerging
literature that deals specifically with interregionalism. The thesis starts by presenting a comprehensive framework for analysis of interregional
relations using the theory of interregionalism. The theory of interregionalism, ascribes a
series of motivations and impacts that interregionalism. should exhibit, all of which are
replicated in EU complex interregional strategy. The EU is found to have a consistent and
coherent complex interregional strategy that it employs across three world regions: Asia,
Africa and Latin America. The EU, notably the Commission, is pursuing an ambitious
complex interregional strategy in each region that encompasses different levels of
relations with different actors, but a strategy that always centers on the pursuit of pure
interregionalism. Whilst the thesis details the EU's pursuit of this consistent complex
interregional strategy with all three of the aforementioned world regions, it is the
presence of the Andean Community, Central American Common Market and Mercosur in
Latin America that marks the region out for deeper analysis. Complex interregional
strategy in Latin America is applied consistently to all three regional integration vehicles,
confirming the EU desire to pursue pure interregionalism, most notably with Mercosur.
Analysis of EU relations with Mercosur reveals a core tension between strategy and action, notably that Commission strategy is not translated into action, as witnessed by the change towards bilateral relations with Brazil in 2007.
The thesis finds that more important than the EU inability to translate strategy into action,
is its inability to foster regional integration in its partners and encourage more coherent
counterparts for the future pursuit of pure interregionalism.