The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis

Four decades of the EU’s group-to-group dialogues with the Southern Mediterranean grouping of countries and with ASEAN have produced different dynamics and outcomes, despite the EU’s common strategy to use economic soft power to achieve their goals for the partnerships. Diverging conditions in the t...

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Main Author: Hong, Wai Mun
Other Authors: EU Centre in Singapore
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/79657
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19391
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-796572020-09-26T21:51:38Z The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis Hong, Wai Mun EU Centre in Singapore DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science::International relations Four decades of the EU’s group-to-group dialogues with the Southern Mediterranean grouping of countries and with ASEAN have produced different dynamics and outcomes, despite the EU’s common strategy to use economic soft power to achieve their goals for the partnerships. Diverging conditions in the two regions created inconsistency in the EU’s application of the common approach. The EU’s neighbourhood security concerns forced it to relax its political stand with their Southern Mediterranean partners. For ASEAN, geographical distance dilutes the EU’s security concerns it that region and has afforded the EU to be more ideological and assertive on democracy and human rights practices. These issues have provoked disagreements in EU-ASEAN dialogues, but both sides have also tried to remain pragmatic in order to achieve some progress in the partnership. In contrast, the protracted the Arab-Israeli conflict continues to hamper the Euro-Mediterranean dialogue, resulting in little progress. Social upheavals in the Southern Mediterranean also brought their partnership to a standstill. The EU’s cooperation with former authoritarian regimes like Libya and Syria have only caused damage to its credibility in the Southern Mediterranean, and future Euro-Mediterranean dialogues are likely to be affected by it. 2014-05-20T05:47:05Z 2019-12-06T13:30:16Z 2014-05-20T05:47:05Z 2019-12-06T13:30:16Z 2013 2013 Working Paper Hong, W. M. (2013). The EU’s Group-to-Group Dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A Comparative Analysis (EUC Working Paper, No. 18). Singapore: EU Centre. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/79657 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19391 en EUC working paper, No. 18-13 © 2013 EU Centre in Singapore. 20 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science::International relations
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science::International relations
Hong, Wai Mun
The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis
description Four decades of the EU’s group-to-group dialogues with the Southern Mediterranean grouping of countries and with ASEAN have produced different dynamics and outcomes, despite the EU’s common strategy to use economic soft power to achieve their goals for the partnerships. Diverging conditions in the two regions created inconsistency in the EU’s application of the common approach. The EU’s neighbourhood security concerns forced it to relax its political stand with their Southern Mediterranean partners. For ASEAN, geographical distance dilutes the EU’s security concerns it that region and has afforded the EU to be more ideological and assertive on democracy and human rights practices. These issues have provoked disagreements in EU-ASEAN dialogues, but both sides have also tried to remain pragmatic in order to achieve some progress in the partnership. In contrast, the protracted the Arab-Israeli conflict continues to hamper the Euro-Mediterranean dialogue, resulting in little progress. Social upheavals in the Southern Mediterranean also brought their partnership to a standstill. The EU’s cooperation with former authoritarian regimes like Libya and Syria have only caused damage to its credibility in the Southern Mediterranean, and future Euro-Mediterranean dialogues are likely to be affected by it.
author2 EU Centre in Singapore
author_facet EU Centre in Singapore
Hong, Wai Mun
format Working Paper
author Hong, Wai Mun
author_sort Hong, Wai Mun
title The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis
title_short The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis
title_full The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis
title_fullStr The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis
title_full_unstemmed The EU’s group-to-group dialogue with the Southern Mediterranean and ASEAN – how much have they achieved? A comparative analysis
title_sort eu’s group-to-group dialogue with the southern mediterranean and asean – how much have they achieved? a comparative analysis
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/79657
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/19391
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