1st Edition

Europe after Enlargement

Edited By Yannis Stivachtis, Mark Webber Copyright 2014

    The enlargement of European-based organisations has reached a near terminal point. The Council of Europe and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) currently cover virtually all states of Europe (Belarus still remains excluded from the first of these). The EU and NATO have experienced extensive processes of enlargement and the scope for continuing enlargement is now limited largely to the Balkans and the European neutrals. Given this state of affairs it is now pertinent to think of a Europe characterised not by enlargement but by post-enlargement.

    In International Relations (IR) conceptual thinking on Europe (as opposed just to the EU) has been undertaken using a range of scholarly tools. In this volume, attention to Europe proceeds from English School (ES) thinking, and specifically its three-fold distinction between international system, international society and world society. It is the international society element (the development/institutionalisation of shared interests and identities buttressed by rules and norms) which signifies in their most concrete form different patterns of interaction or integration between states.

    This book will be of interest to international relations scholars, as well as practitioners within the European Union and other intergovernmental institutions.

    It was published as a special issue of the Journal of European Integration.

    1. Introduction: Regional International Society in a Post-Enlargement Europe  Yannis A. Stivachtis ( Virginia Tech) & Mark Webber(University of Birmingham)

    2. The Changing Nature of International Institutions in Europe: The Challenge of the European Union  Thomas Diez (University of Tuebingen), Ian Manners (Danish Institute for International Studies) & Richard Whitman (University of Kent)

    3. NATO: Within and Between European International Society  Mark Webbe (University of Birmingham)

    4. The Council of Europe: The Institutional Limits of Contemporary European International Society?  Yannis A. Stivachtis (Virginia Tech) & Mike Habegger (University of Delaware)

    5. The OSCE: A Pan-European Society in the Making?  Georgeta Pourchot (Virginia Tech)

    6. Russia and Europe: Whose Society?  Richard Sakwa (University of Kent)

    7. Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine: In or Out of European Regional International Society?  Martin Dangerfield (University of Wolverhampton)

    8. Turkey: Identity, Foreign Policy, and Socialization in a Post-Enlargement Europe  Behar Rumelili (Koc University)

    Biography

    Yannis A. Stivachtis is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the International Studies Program at Virginia Tech (USA). His research interests include the expansion of international society, conditionality and international order, international society and the civilizing process, EU enlargement, and international/European security. He teaches in the areas of international politics and security studies.

    Mark Webber is Professor of International Politics and Head of the School of Government and Society at the University of Birmingham, UK. Having begun his academic career specializing in Russian foreign policy, he has spent the last ten years teaching and researching foreign policy analysis, security studies and international organization. The specific focus of his current research is the politics of NATO and European enlargement.