Results 21 to 30 of about 2,790 (179)
‘Parliamentarisation’ of the CFSP: Wishful Thinking or a Rational Choice?
The paper provides an insight into the institutional system of EU external relations, focusing on the role of the European Parliament. It argues that the current intergovernmental set-up of the CFSP is one of the major reasons for EU international under ...
Oleksandr Moskalenko
doaj +1 more source
Exploring EU Competence in CFSP: Logic or Contradiction?
This paper discusses questions concerning the conferral of EU Member States’ competences in foreign affairs to the Union and the consequences of such conferral.
Maja Brkan
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Legal Nature of CFSP’s Acts in the Acts of the Council of the European Union
In his article the author considers it to be vital to dwell on the legal nature of the acts adopted by the Council of EU. In the author’s opinion the understanding of the nature of common positions and joint actions of EU is important both from ...
I. A. Kochin
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ABSTRACT Market‐based solutions are increasingly tested to address aflatoxin issues in peanuts in developing countries. Although previous studies have found that Haitian grocery store shoppers are willing to pay a 21% premium for peanut butter with levels of aflatoxin that meet international standards, no information is available for the much larger ...
Phendy Jacques +2 more
wiley +1 more source
"Balancing Global Influence: The "transatlantic conflict syndrome" and the CFSP" [PDF]
Despite the many and highly publicised failures of the EU to agree in the field of foreign and security policy, the EU members have gradually and successively developed their cooperation in this area over time.
Strömvik, Maria, Strömvik, Maria.
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A Question of Jurisdiction: Art. 267 TFEU Preliminary References of a CFSP Nature
(Series Information) European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, 2017 2(1), 201-208 | European Forum Insight of 1 April 2017 | (Table of Contents) I. Ambiguity of the Treaties: jurisdiction. - II. Judgment. - III. Analysis.
Graham Butler
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ABSTRACT An inherent divide features within the Lisbon Treaty between civilian and military/security competences; something previously more obvious via the ‘pillar system's’ separations. This division follows the Member States (MS) (natural) protection of their military/defence autonomy; their core sovereign powers.
Charlie J. P. Bennett
wiley +1 more source
The Institutional Architecture of CFSP after the Lisbon Treaty: Constitutional breakthrough or challenges ahead? CEPS Challenge Paper No. 10, 23 June 2008 [PDF]
This paper analyses the impact of the Lisbon Treaty on the institutional architecture of CFSP and the overall external action of the Union. The Lisbon Treaty has introduced some remarkable changes which might substantially influence the (inter ...
Wessels, Wolfgang., Bopp, Franziska.
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ABSTRACT This article examines the evolution of European Union (EU) space policy through the lens of historical institutionalism, highlighting how security and defence considerations have been incrementally integrated into a domain originally framed as civilian and scientific.
Gustavo G. Müller, Philip De Man
wiley +1 more source
The Deadlock that never happened: The Impact of Enlargement on the Common Foreign and Security Policy Council Working Groups. European Political Economy Review No. 6 (March 2007) , pp. 4-30 [PDF]
Contrary to some previous assumptions, the enlargement did not halt the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) decisionmaking process in a substantial way.
Pomorska, Karolina., Juncos, Ana E.
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