1st Edition
The Making of European Security Policy Between Institutional Dynamics and Global Challenges
Foreword
Antonio Missiroli
1. Introduction: Global Challenges and Institutional Dynamics in the Making of European Security Policy
Thomas Christiansen and Roberta N.Haar
Part I: The EU as a global actor: from Soft Power to Hard Power
2. Towards European Cooperative Autonomy
Nathalie Tocci
3. Normative Power in the Eastern Neighbourhood
Gergana Noutcheva
4. The Challenges Ahead for European Cultural Diplomacy
Mai’a Cross
5. Development Cooperation or Security Policy: The EU’s Support for Conflict Prevention and Peacebuilding
Andrew Sherriff
Part II: Institutional Dynamics and Approaches
6. The EU’s Engagement with International Organisations: NATO's Impact on the Making of EU Security Policy
Hanna Ojanen
7. The Internal and External Security Nexus in Europe: Exploring and Problematising Its Emergence
Raphael Bossong and Mark Rhinard
8. Institutionalising the Integrated Approach to External Conflict
Steven Blockmans and Loes Debuysere
Part III: A Recalibration of the Transatlantic Alliance
9. The Role of China in Transatlantic Relations
Emil Kirchner
10. Reinterpreting the Transatlantic Relationship
Erik Jones
11. European Union Diplomacy and the Trump Administration: Multilateral Diplomacy in a Transactional World?
Michael Smith
12. Mogherini and the Holy Grail: The Quest for European Strategic Autonomy
Sven Biscop
13. Conclusion
Sabina Lange and Sophie Vanhoonacker
Biography
Roberta N. Haar is Professor of Foreign Policy Analysis and Transatlantic Relations, Maastricht University, and the Research Director at University College Maastricht within the Faculty of Science and Engineering, Maastricht University, the Netherlands.
Thomas Christiansen is Professor of Political Science and European Integration at Luiss University, Italy, and Part-time Professor at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Maastricht University, the Netherlands.
Sabina Lange is Senior Lecturer at the European Institute of Public Administration, the Netherlands, and Associate Professor in International Relations at the Faculty of Social Science of the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Sophie Vanhoonacker is Professor in Administrative Governance at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Maastricht University, the Netherlands.






