1st Edition

The EU’s Democracy Promotion and the Mediterranean Neighbours Orientation, Ownership and Dialogue in Jordan and Turkey

By Ann-Kristin Jonasson Copyright 2013
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book provides a systematic analysis of the EU’s extensive, but so far largely failed, efforts to promote democracy in the Mediterranean region, thoroughly assessing its democracy promotion in relation to two Mediterranean countries – Jordan and Turkey. By pinpointing essential prerequisites for democracy promotion and analyzing how the EU’s policies have related to these, the author offers a theoretically based analytical framework focused on the importance of the local orientation and ownership of the project of democratization, and the broader dialogue between the democracy promoter and the partner society. The author concludes that there are basic deficiencies in the EU’s democracy promotion, leading to policy implications of vital importance as the EU now grapples with how to make its democracy promotion successful.

    The EU’s Democracy Promotion and the Mediterranean Neighbours will be of interest to students and scholars of Democratisation studies, EU studies, Middle East Studies and EU Neighbourhood studies.

    1. Essential Elements of Democracy Promotion  2. The EU's Democracy Promotion in Jordan  3. The EU's Democracy Promotion in Turkey  4. The EU's Democracy Promotion in the Mediterranean: Results and Conclusions

    Biography

    Ann-Kristin Jonasson is a senior lecturer in the Department of Political Science at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.

    "Ann-Kristin Jonassonâ's book, The EU’s Democracy Promotion and the Mediterranean Neighbors: Orientation, Ownership and Dialogue in Jordan and Turkey, systematically evaluates the EU’s democratization efforts by focusing on democracy promotion in two Mediterranean countries, Jordan and Turkey, and effectively addresses the major pitfalls in the EU’s strategy. Therefore, it is a timely contribution as the Arab revolutions have forced us to reconsider the prospects for democratization in the region." -  

    Suna Gülfer Ihlamur-Öner, Insight Turkey