1st Edition

Building Security in Europe's New Borderlands

By Renata Dwan Copyright 1999

    While European integration advances, many of the countries along Europe's eastern and southern periphery have fallen prey to chronic conflict punctuated by a series of small wars. Exacerbating the situation has been the lack of effective organizational means for mediating local conflicts, facilitating regional development and structuring cooperation with larger regional and international institutions. What are the prospects for enhancing security in the most volatile subregions of post-communist Europe? This text examines the external and internal factors that impede or foster subregional cooperation in South-Eastern and East-Central Europe and the Caucasus. It includes chapters situating these borderlands in the context of a wider Europe with an evolving security architecture.

    Reflections on Subregionalism and Wider European Security, Anders Bjurner. Part 1 East-Central Europe: The Western NIS - From Borderland to Subregion?, Charles King; Subregional Relations and Cooperative Initiatives in East-Central Europe, Oleksandr Pavliuk. Part 2 South-Eastern Europe: External Institutional Frameworks and Subregionalism in South-Eastern Europe, Sophia Clement; Legitimizing Subregionalism - Evolving Internal Regional Perceptions, Initiatives and Approaches to Subregional Relations in South-Eastern Europe, Plamen Pantev. Part 3 Trans-Caucasus: External Factors Affecting Subregional Cooperation in the Southern Tier, S. Neil MacFarlane; The Southern Caucasus - Cooperation or Conflict?, Arif Yunusov. Part 4 Interlocking Cooperation: Europe's Security Architecture and the New "Boundary Zones", Andrew Cottey.

    Biography

    Dwan, Renata