1st Edition

The EU Security Continuum Blurring Internal and External Security

By Alistair J.K. Shepherd Copyright 2022
    254 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    254 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book examines how internal and external security are blurring at the EU level, and the implications this has for EU security governance and the EU as a security actor.

    The EU claims that ‘internal and external security are inseparable’ and requires a more integrated approach. This book critically assesses this claim in relation to the threats facing the EU, its responses to them, and the practical and normative implications for EU security governance and actorness. It sets out a novel conceptual framework – the EU security continuum - to examine the ways and extent to which internal and external security are blurring along three axes: geographic, bureaucratic, and functional. This is done through an analysis of four key security issues, regional conflict, terrorism, organised crime, and cybersecurity. The book demonstrates that, to varying degrees, these security threats and/or responses do transcend boundaries. However, institutional turf wars and capability silos hamper the EU’s integrated approach and, therefore, its management of transboundary security threats. Yet, the EU’s pursuit of an integrated approach is reframing its claimed normative distinctiveness toward a more practical one, based on a transnational and multidimensional approach. Such a rearticulation, if implemented, would make the EU a genuinely transboundary security actor, properly structured and equipped to tackle the 21st century’s internal-external security continuum.

    This book will be of much interest to students of European Security, EU politics, and international relations.

    Introduction

    1. Conceptualising EU security: toward a security continuum

    2. Framing EU security: the internal-external continuum

    3. Conflict and crises: external stability for internal security

    4. Terrorism and counterterrorism: from internal to international

    5. Tackling organised crime: from Sarajevo to the Sahel

    6. Cybersecurity: networks, crime, defence, and diplomacy

    7. Governing the security continuum: institutions, accountability, and secrecy

    8. The security continuum and the EU as a security actor

    Conclusion

    Biography

    Alistair J.K. Shepherd is Senior Lecturer in European Security in the Department of International Politics, Aberystwyth University, UK.