1st Edition

Routledge Handbook on the European Union and International Institutions Performance, Policy, Power

    512 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    512 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    While the EU has championed "effective multilateralism" and experienced a dramatic internal reform process to improve its performance in external relations, broader multilateral processes have also undergone dramatic change.

    This Handbook addresses an increasingly contested issue of profound political importance: Europe’s presence in multilateral institutions. It assesses both the evolving role of Europe in international institutions, and the transformations in international institutions themselves. Acknowledging that the category of international institutions comprises a highly diverse field of multilateral engagements, this Handbook presents a state of the art approach that analyzes both what we have learned about the EU and international institutions as well as identifying promising avenues for further research. The Handbook is divided into six parts:

    • Part I examines the EU’s diplomatic and legal personality in international relations that constitutes the internal foundation for the EU’s engagement with international institutions.
    • Part II assesses how EU multilateralism intersects with other international institutions and provides a means to assess the performance of international institutions as well as the EU itself in multilateral processes.
    • Part III focuses on the EU’s participation with key institutions within the general UN system, such as the UN General Assembly and Security Council as well as specific policy domains such as human rights across UN institutions.
    • Part IV focuses on EU relations with wide range of international organizations in a variety of fields, from organizations in economic and security realms to environmental institutions and specialized agencies.
    • Part V focuses on the EU’s engagement in a broad spectrum of issue-specific international agreements and international regimes, addressing issues such as non-proliferation of WMDs, climate change, information technology, and the emerging Gx-system (G7, G8, G20 etc).
    • Part VI examines broader contextual factors that influence the relationship between the EU and international institutions, including the evolution of multilateralism, the trans-Atlantic relationship, global norms and the emergence of multipolarity.  

    This comprehensive volume brings together scholars and practitioners to summarize and synthesize existing knowledge in the field. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of European politics, the EU’s external relations, international relations, international organizations and international political economy.

    Introduction Knud Erik Jørgensen and Katie Verlin Laatikainen 

    PART I: The EU IN INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS 

    1. Form and Substance in the EU’s Multilateral Diplomacy Simon Duke 

    2. EU Delegations: Europe’s Link to the World Eric Hayes 

    3. The EU’s Diplomatic Machinery Caterina Carta 

     PART II: APPROACHES: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PERFORMANCE 

    4. Analyzing the Performance of International Organizations Tamar Gutner and Alexander Thompson 

    5. Inter-organizational Approaches Joachim A. Koops 

    6. Analyzing the Performance of the European Union Knud Erik Jørgensen 

    7. Evaluating Diplomatic Performance in International Institutions Niels van Willigen and Yvonne Kleistra 

    PART III: THE UNITED NATIONS 

    8. The European Union in UN Politics Caroline Bouchard and Edith Drieskens 

    9. The EU and the UN Security Council Reform Debate: A Missed Opportunity or a Blessing in Disguise? Spyros Blavoukos and Dimitris Bourantonis 

    10. The United Nations Role in Preserving Peace: Effectiveness of Multilateralism in Question Joachim Krause 

    11. The Responsibility to Protect Tonny Brems Knudsen 

    12. The Role of Judges Confronted with Norms form Different Origins: The Case of Counter- Terrorist Sanctions Christina Eckes 

    13. The study of the EU promotion of human rights: the importance of international and internal factors Giuseppe Balducci 

    PART IV: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS 

    14. The EU at the World Bank: institutional and policy performance Eugenia Baroncelli 

    15. The International Monetary Fund Jan Wouters and Sven van Kerckhoven 

    16. The International Telecommunication Union Jamal Shahin 

    17. The OECD Peter Carroll and Ansley Kellow 

    18. EU-NATO Relations Nina Græger and Kristin Haugevik 

    19. OSCE David Galbreath and Malte Brosig 

    20. Global Environmental Institutions Lisanne Groen and Sebastian Oberthür 

    PART V: INTERNATIONAL REGIMES 

    21. The European Union and International Regimes Mike Smith and Ole Elström 

    22. The European Union in the Gx System: representation and coordination Peter Debaere and Jan Orbie 

    23. Factors shaping the effectiveness of EU external economic policies Steven Woolcock 

    24. The Performance of the EU in the International Institutional Landscape of the Internet George Christou and Seamus Simpson 

    25. The European Union and the Climate Change Regime Louise van Schaik 

    26. The Good, the Bad and the European: The EU and the Global Non-Proliferation Institutions Benjamin Kienzle and Cindy Vestergaard 

    27. Regulating the Private Military and Security Industry: A European Security Governance Response Åsne Kalland Aarstad 

    PART VI: GLOBAL INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXTS AND EU MULTILATERALISM 

    28. The European Union and Multilateralism: Touchstone or Millstone? Robert Kissack 

    29. When Multilateralism Hits Brussels: The Influence of International Institutions on the EU Oriol Costa 

    30. Perceptions of the EU in International Institutions Sonia Lucarelli 

    31. Two-Track Realism: Transatlantic Cooperation in Fighting Terrorism Annegret Bendiek 

    32. Global Norms and European Power Lisbeth Aggestam 

    33. EU Multilateralism in a Multipolar World Katie Laatikainen

    Biography

    Knud Erik Jørgensen is Professor of International Relations at Aarhus University. His research spans European Studies and International Relations, focusing on theorizing and European foreign policy, specifically foreign policy strategies (bilateral and multilateral). He is the chair of the ECPR Standing Group on International Relations and former editor of Cooperation and Conflict, co-editor of the Palgrave Studies in International Relations and associate editor of Journal of European Integration.

    Katie Verlin Laatikainen is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of International Studies at Adelphi University, New York. Her research has focused on the intersection of EU and UN multilateralism for the past decade, and she worked closely with the Czech and Swedish Missions to the United Nations during their respective EU presidencies as they prepared for implementation of the Lisbon Treaty in New York.