EU Enlargement and Current Adaptation Challenges


Jaroslav Jaks

 

The European Union’s (EU) enlargement process was an integral part of the EC/EU’s wider integration project and, surprisingly, it has not yet halted. The journey from six to twenty seven has been a long and complicated one, and the realisation of some of the projects has required much time and political consideration. It seems that the queue of countries that are on the waiting list to join the EU remains a long one even after the 2004 and 2007 enlargements. Enlargement cannot be considered an automatism and must not be taken for granted when reviewing past, as well as future extensions. For example, it is noteworthy, that even those European countries that maintained strong reservations towards continued integration projects of the European Community (i.e. Great Britain) eventually pursued accession to the EC/EU, in spite of efforts to direct the trajectory of integration towards either an economic or political objective. Integration became a notable valve for the consensual solution to achieve the interests of a number of European states, mainly; France and Germany. The current, positive state of European relations, confirms that history may teach many valuable lessons.


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Volume 3 / Issue 1 / May 2009
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Volume 3, Issue 2


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Continuity and Change in the US Foreign and Security Policy with the Accession of President Obama

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Editor’s Note

Scholars need to re-enter decision making processes

Mitchell A. Belfer

Scholars of international relations (IR), divided as they are over the contours of the discipline, bear moral responsibility to, among other things, objectively and fairly present the unfolding nature of international affairs, the types and potency of actual and potential challenges, and the means available to confront such challenges.

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