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European Journal of International Relations
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Geostrategies of the European Neighbourhood Policy

Christopher S. Browning

University of Warwick, UK

Pertti Joenniemi

Danish Institute for International Studies, Copenhagen, Denmark

The debate about the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) has, in essence, been about borders and bordering. Such departures could contribute — and often do so — to a rather fixed geopolitical vision of what the EU is about and how it aims to run and to organize the broader European space. However, this article aims to retain space for viewing the ENP as a developmental and somewhat fluid process. A conceptual framework, based on outlining three geopolitical models and a series of different geopolitical strategies employed by the EU in regard to its borders, is hence employed in order to be able to tell a more dynamic story regarding the developing nature of the ENP and the EU's evolving nature more generally. The complexity traced informs us that various geostrategies may be held at the same time at the external border. Moreover, the dominance of one geostrategy may be replaced by another or a different combination of them with regard to the same neighbourhood. It is, more generally, argued that if anything it is precisely this dynamism that should be championed as a valuable resource, avoiding the tendency to close off options through the reification of particular visions of the nature of the EU and its borders.

Key Words: borders • European identity • European neighbourhood policy — geostrategies — margins

European Journal of International Relations, Vol. 14, No. 3, 519-551 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1354066108092311


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