1st Edition

The Contested Diplomacy of the European External Action Service Inception, Establishment and Consolidation

    246 Pages
    by Routledge

    246 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The creation of the European External Action Service (EEAS), the EU’s new diplomatic body, was accompanied by high expectations for improving the way Europe would deal with foreign policy. However, observers of its first years of operation have come to the opposite conclusion.



    This book explains why the EEAS, despite being hailed as a milestone in integration in Europe’s foreign policy, has fallen short of the mark. It does so by enlisting American institutionalist approaches to European questions of institutional creation, bureaucratic organisations and change. The book examines the peculiar shape the EEAS’s organisation has taken, what political factors determined that shape and design and how it has operated. Finally, it looks at the autonomous operation of the EEAS from a bureaucratic theory perspective, concluding that this is the best way to understand its course. Including data gathered from elite interviews of politicians and senior officials involved in the institutional process, an assessment of official documentary evidence and a survey of EEAS officials at the organisation’s beginning, it sheds new light on a controversial tool in the EU's foreign policy.



    This text will be of key interest to scholars and students of European Union foreign policy, public administration, and more broadly to European Union and European politics, as well as to practitioners within those fields.

    1. Introduction: Constructing the EU Diplomatic Service  2. The Long Road to EU Diplomatic Capacities  3. Bureaucratic Change in EU Foreign Policy  4. The Shape of Things to Come: The Inception of the European External Action Service  5. Navigating the ‘Politics of Eurocratic Structure’: The Establishment of the European External Action Service  6. Bureaucracy, Competition, and Control: The Consolidation of the European External Action Service  7. Sailing on a Second Wind? Trajectories of Consolidation for the European External Action Service  8. Conclusion: Towards a European Foreign Ministry?

    Biography

    Jost-Henrik Morgenstern-Pomorski is a Lecturer in Political Science with a special focus on European and American politics at Maastricht University, the Netherlands. He was awarded a Marie Curie Early Stage Researcher position at Loughborough University, UK, and was a visiting PhD student at the University of Cambridge, UK.