1st Edition

The Europeanisation of Development Policy

Edited By Maurizio Carbone, Jan Orbie Copyright 2018
    158 Pages
    by Routledge

    158 Pages
    by Routledge

    Despite the growing academic interest in the development policy of the European Union (EU) and the booming literature on Europeanisation, the impact of Europe on national development policies has largely been overlooked. By exploring Member State interactions with and through the EU level across a number of different issues, this volume looks to herald a new research agenda. The picture emerging from the empirical evidence is that of modest degrees of Europeanisation. Resistance to Europe can be attributed to different factors, some operating at the domestic level (e.g. established cultural and normative structures, different types of veto players) and others related to the existence of several groupings with alternative policy prescriptions (e.g. Nordic donors, like-minded countries, former colonial powers). Even where there are signs of convergence (or divergence) between the development policies of the various Member States, they may be due to other influences rather than pressures coming from the EU. This book was originally published as a special issue of European Politics and Society.

    Introduction: The Europeanisation of development policy 1. Europeanisation through the prism of regime complexity: the case of French aid 2. An end to Nordic exceptionalism? Europeanisation and Nordic development policies 3. Italy’s development policy and the domestic politics of Europeanisation: why Europe matters so little 4. Europeanisation should meet international constructivism: the Nordic Plus group and the internalisation of political conditionality by France and the United Kingdom 5. Europeanisation of aid budgets: nothing is as it seems 6. The Europeanisation of budget support: do government capacity and autonomy matter? 7. Europeanisation and the EU’s comprehensive approach to crisis management in Africa 8. Europeanisation in Aid for Trade: the impact of capacity and socialisation Conclusions: Europeanisation, globalisation or (re)nationalisation? Revisiting development policy in the European Union



     

    Biography

    Maurizio Carbone is Professor of International Relations and Development and Jean Monnet Professor of EU External Policies at the University of Glasgow. His research focuses on the EU’s relations with the developing world, including foreign aid as well as other development-related policies, and more generally the politics of international cooperation.



    Jan Orbie is the Director of the Centre for EU Studies and Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science at Ghent University. His research focuses on the international policies of the EU, in particular EU trade and development policies, democracy promotion, and the EU’s global social policy.