Counter-terrorism in the EU’s external relations

In this latest article in Journal of European Integration, Mai'a Cross argues that European external borders are actually becoming stronger, not weaker, despite the renewed emphasis on national borders within Europe. 

Journal of European Integration

Abstract

The renewed emphasis on national political boundaries across Europe would seem to go hand-in-hand with a weaker external personality for the EU. However, there are several prominent examples of EU leadership that challenge this notion, from the December 2015 UN climate change agreement to common sanctions against Russia to a new Global Strategy. This paper examines a policy area that lies at the intersection of populist outrage and external engagement: counter-terrorism. In the wake of the 2015 and 2016 Paris and Brussels terrorist attacks, the EU has made significant strides in enhancing the external dimension of its counter-terrorism policies, particularly in terms of intelligence sharing, formal and informal diplomacy, and the internal–external nexus of security. The article argues that major terrorist attacks in 2015–2016 have served as critical junctures of crisis, driving counter-terrorism policies forward and emphasising the notion of European boundaries beyond any functionalist or securitization explanation.

Full info

Mai'a K. Davis Cross
Counter-terrorism in the EU's external relations

Journal of European Integration, online 2017, Pages 1-16
DOI: 10.1080/07036337.2017.1327524

Open Access (link)

 

Tags: Terrorism, counter-terrorism, EU foreign policy, EU crises, EU integration
Published May 24, 2017 9:24 AM - Last modified Feb. 2, 2022 7:14 AM