Vol. 46, No. 1, March 2011
Opinions
Global Climate Governance after Cancun: Options for EU Leadership
Sebastian Oberthür
One year after the failure of the Copenhagen Climate Summit, the next conference
of the parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto
Protocol in December 2010 adopted the so-called Cancun Agreements. Thereby, the
Cancun conference succeeded in keeping the UN climate process alive and averting
serious damage to multilateralism more broadly. However, the Cancun Agreements
fall seriously short of providing for effective action on climate change. The
current weakness of the international framework reinforces the rationale for
strengthening domestic EU climate policies. It also requires a further
rethinking of the EU’s international leadership strategy.
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Palestinian-Israeli Negotiations: An Objective in Themselves
Iyad Barghouti
Despite the efforts put into negotiations, they have created a self-perpetuating
cycle of disappointment, frustration and empty dialogue. With contradictory
Palestinian and Israeli agendas - Palestinians negotiating for an independent
state, an end to occupation, etc., and Israel negotiating primarily over
security concerns - one must question the reason behind prolonged negotiations.
Is US mediation, accused by many of extreme bias towards Israel, to blame? Or
are negotiations an Israeli objective to execute a particular political agenda?
In spite of the international community’s recognition of establishing an
independent Palestinian state, the current reality on the ground undermines any
creation of one. This reality was allowed only by the strategic prolonging of
negotiations. A particular focus on the proceedings following the Oslo Accords
explains how Palestinian-Israeli negotiations have been used to pursue a
particular objective.
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A Package Not Delivered: US Incentives and Israel’s Settlement Freeze
Nimrod Goren
Incentives are capable of creating favourable environments in which peace
processes can make progress. This is especially true for mega incentives, which
can assist in overcoming political and socio-psychological barriers to peace. In
Israeli-Arab peacemaking, incentives have not yet proven efficient. To date,
they have been used in a limited and inefficient manner. In 2010, the US offered
Israel incentives in return for an extension of Israel’s settlement freeze.
This move failed due to unfavourable political conditions and scepticism
regarding its ability to bring about a major breakthrough. Nevertheless, it
signaled that incentives are now an integral tool in US diplomacy and could
serve as a step towards crafting a multi-national mega incentive package for
Middle East peace.
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Essays
An Emerging 'Great Game' in Africa?
Of BRICs and Mortar: The Growing Relations Between Africa and the Global South
Maxi Schoeman
The ambitions of the global South for a larger share of global wealth and
political power are at least partly being played out on the African continent.
The increasing Africa-South relations seem to indicate a relative decline in
Africa-North ties, with the shift in Africa’s trade relations from North to
South resulting in trade creation rather than trade diversion. The South
partners are also providing much needed infrastructure development assistance to
the continent. Politically, these relations are formalised in a host of
frameworks and associations and operate in fundamentally different ways from
those between Africa and its erstwhile colonial masters. It is doubtful, though,
to what extent Africa’s capacity to influence the global agenda is
strengthened, especially given that not a single African country is (yet) a
member of the ‘South Big Four’, the BRICs.
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From Colonialism to Partnership in Africa-Europe Relations?
Gerrit Olivier
The European Union has been trying to achieve its long-term goals through
partnerships and cooperation with other like-minded global actors. Africa
(through its regional institutional body, the African Union) has been the first
and only multilateral entity with which the EU has forged a long-term
partnership. Despite its rhetorical language, the Africa-EU Strategic
Partnership is unlikely to upgrade the political and economic interaction
between the two partners. In the past few years, serious rifts have grown
between the EU and its African counterparts concerning trade agreements and
development policies. Moreover, new actors have made significant inroads in
Africa, providing an alternative to its long-standing dependence on Europe.
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Public and Elite Views on Europe vs. China in Africa
Lorenzo Fioramonti and Patrick Kimunguyi
Europe has been the privileged economic and political partner of Africa, but
more recently China has increased its foothold in Africa through important
financial investments and trade agreements. Against this backdrop, the empirical
research conducted in 2007-08 in Kenya and South Africa as part of a pioneering
international project investigates the perceptions of public opinion, political
leaders, civil society activists and media operators. While confirming their
continent’s traditional proximity to Europe, African citizens are increasingly
interested in China and its impact on Africa’s development. Europe is
criticised for not having been able to dismiss the traditionally ‘patronising’
attitude towards Africa. While African civil society leaders and media operators
describe China as an opportunity for Africa to break free of its historical
dependence on European markets, other opinion leaders warn against too much
enthusiasm for the Asian giant. There is a suspicion that the Chinese strategy
might, in the long run, turn into a new form of economic patronage.
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Europe Forum
Pax or Pox Europeana after the Lisbon Treaty?
Simon Duke
The time is nigh for the EU to think more strategically about its global role.
This is suggested by the confluence of changes in the international system
itself and the internal changes introduced by the Lisbon Treaty. When approached
via a geopolitical prism, the EU’s main interests lie in its neighbourhood, to
the east and south, central Asia and the Gulf. These are regions where the EU
enjoys the most influence. The EU should therefore engage with other
international actors, both traditional and emerging, in an intensified dialogue
concentrating in particular on these areas. A Union with a clearer idea of what
it is trying to accomplish on the world stage, backed by the means and
determination to succeed, could herald a regional pax Europeana, while a
continuation of the EU’s current drift will condemn it to increasing
irrelevance - a pox Europeana.
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How to Renew Transatlantic Relations in the 21st Century
Marcin Zaborowski
The EU and the US, mainly through NATO, have been successful in securing peace
and prosperity in Europe during the Cold War and in promoting peace beyond
Europe after 1990. With the emergence of new powers and the rise of
multipolarity, however, it is no longer apparent that transatlantic relations
are indispensable and ways must be found to make sure that the relationship
remains relevant. The EU and the US currently relate poorly to each other and as
a result do not obtain the best possible outcome from their combined resources.
Two elements are key to improving transatlantic relations: an inclusive policy
towards Turkey (in the strategic interests of both the EU and the US) and more
permanent and workable structures suited to the realities of the 21st century.
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Why Ireland’s Luck Ran Out and What This Means for the Eurozone
Shalendra D. Sharma
Given its impressive economic performance over the past two decades, Ireland
earned the title, the 'Celtic Tiger'. However, as the contagion from the
subprime-induced global financial crisis spread, Ireland’s boom went bust. In
short order, Ireland (like Greece before it), had to seek financial assistance
from the EU and the IMF to stave off sovereign default and national humiliation.
How did Dublin and the eurozone respond to the crisis and what lessons can be
learned from Ireland’s experience? While Ireland grapples with its huge public
debt, the EU needs to instill confidence in the markets before the current
rolling debt crisis becomes a systemic threat to the eurozone.
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Overcoming the Past in Sino-Japanese Relations?
Mingde Wang and Maaike Okano-Heijmans
Historical disputes and nationalism continue to be issues of concern and
controversy in the relationship between Japan and China. In 2005, popular
nationalist sentiment culminated in nationwide anti-Japanese movements in China.
This led to a crucial shift in the way China and Japan deal with history and
popular nationalism. An unprecedented dialogue on war memory was initiated in
late 2006, and the Sichuan earthquake relief effort in mid-2008 marked a further
departure from earlier patterns. The Chinese government shifted away from
conventional historiography that largely fed negative images of Japan. While
these developments point to new, cooperative attitudes that aim to contain
popular nationalist sentiment in manageable proportions, relations are
nevertheless increasingly obscured by other tensions in the bilateral
relationship.
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Book Reviews
Adaptive Governance - A Way to Unlock the Current Climate Change Regime
Ganna Onysko
Review of: Adaptive governance and climate change,
by Ronald D. Brunner and Amanda H. Lynch, American Meteorological Society, 2010
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Following the Digitalised Rabbit: Biometrics and Their Application in Border Management
Rocco Bellanova
Review of: Security, risk and the biometric state : governing borders and bodies,
by Benjamin J. Muller, Routledge, 2010
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Challenges and Opportunities in Chinese Foreign Policy
Claudia Astarita
Review of: Handbook of China's international relations,
edited by Shaun Breslin, Routledge, 2010
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Recent Publications
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