Vol. 44, No. 1, March 2009
Opinions
The "Sovereign Neighbourhood": Weak Statehood Strategies in Eastern Europe
Nicu Popescu and Andrew Wilson
The launch of the Eastern Partnership (EaP) marks the most
significant change to the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) since
it was launched in 2004. In the wake of the Georgia war in August
2008 and yet another gas crisis in January 2009, the EU clearly
needs a more constructive policy towards Eastern Europe. But both
the ENP and EaP are based on a contradiction. They offer only the
remotest possibility of eventual accession to the EU, but are still
based on "accession-light" assumptions, applying the
conditionality model of the 1990s to weak states that are a long way
from meeting the Copenhagen criteria. The priority in the eastern
neighbourhood is not building potential members states but
strengthening sovereignty, in the face of an increasingly assertive
Russian neighbourhood policy. The game is playing the west off
against Russia for geopolitical reward.
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American Primacy by Default: Down but Not Out
Jason W. Davidson and Roberto Menotti
American primacy continues to characterise the international
system, despite trends toward a diffusion of power. The discussion
is too often biased in favour of multipolarity due to imprecise or
misleading definitions of US primacy. On the basis of a simple
definition of what a "pole" is, combining GDP and
defence expenditure, only the US can be considered a global pole.
The current economic crisis is not changing this reality. Even
considering perceptions, soft power, and the ability to translate
power into influence, rising powers like China or an aggregate
power like the EU have a long way to go before they can get on an
equal footing with the United States.
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The Lessons of Ancient History and the Future of Transatlantic Relations
Cesare Merlini
While a global recession of uncertain duration plagues the planet,
the Atlantic countries are faced with an agenda of complicated,
almost intractable international challenges. The surge of new
protagonists on the world scene has been largely the result of a
long period of relative stability and extraordinary economic
growth thanks to the prevalence of Western paradigms. And yet they
mark another step in the shrinking of the West's geostrategic
relevance. Obama's America and half-integrated Europe should deal
with this new multipolar world with a consistent and synergic
approach, made up of a mix of traditional balance-of-power skills
and systemic innovations. Over the past two decades, the US'
solitary position at the apex of global power has made the analogy
with imperial Rome common currency. While this is the wrong lesson
to learn from classical history, the achievements and mistakes of
ancient Greece and republican as well as imperial Rome may still
help us, third millennium Europeans and Americans, sail through
the stormy waters of today's planetary Mediterranean.
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Essays
New Patterns of Transatlantic Security: The Challenge of Multipolarity
Asle Toje
Transatlantic relations are in flux: NATO's struggle for self
preservation; the diminished importance of Europe in American
geopolitics; the semi-failure of European foreign policy
integration; and the absence of a grand bargain among Europe's
leading powers. These four trends are making the current
transatlantic order unsustainable. But if the international system
becomes multipolar, will the "West" be one of the poles?
These developments can be assessed by applying the
"transatlantic bargain" as a conceptual lens through
which to select and assess information. The result is that the
dynamics of multipolarity could spell the end for the
"transatlantic West".
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The Domestic Conditions for a Paradigmatic Change in US Foreign Policy
Sergio Fabbrini and Daniela Sicurelli
Although foreign
policy changes reflect transformations in the international system,
they are also strongly conditioned by domestic factors. This is
particularly true in the United States. Domestic factors have
affected US decision-makers' interpretation of the international
system and the role their country should play in it. That
interpretation has gone through various phases, each characterised
by a predominant paradigm or a struggle between competing paradigms.
If the period between 11 September 2001 and the 2006 mid-term
elections witnessed the uncontested success of unilateralism, after
those mid-terms and the elections of 4 November 2008, the necessary
domestic conditions for a new multilateral paradigm may have been
created.
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The nuclear challenge: non-proliferation, terrorism, energy
Strengthening the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime: Proposals and Problems
Masahiko Asada
Since around the turn of the century, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) has suffered fundamental challenges from several
quarters, which has led to a number of proposals to reinforce the
non-proliferation regime. Among the most effective are a ban on
sensitive nuclear transfers and the universalisation of the
Additional Protocol. The former proposal, although not agreed upon
in the NSG, has been virtually realised as a moratorium within the
G-8 framework. It would be advisable for the G-8 to do the same with
regard to the latter proposal.
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Combating WMD Terrorism: The Short-Sighted US-led Multilateral Response
Eric Rosand
The Bush administration's strong preference for seemingly more
flexible initiatives, involving a select group of countries, and
limiting the size of international bureaucracies, which has resulted
in three US-driven multilateral initiatives to address the threat of
WMD-terrorism - the Proliferation Security Initiative, the G-8
Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons of Mass
Destruction, and United Nations Security Council Resolution 1540 and
the committee and group of experts it established - has produced
mixed results so far. Although it helped to ensure a more rapid
initial response to WMD terrorism, such an approach has also impeded
efforts to build and sustain global support to respond to that
threat.
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The Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism: Big Potential, Limited Impact?
Riccardo Alcaro
The Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism (GICNT) is an
innovative, multi-pronged action aimed at enhancing the domestic
capacities of a state, as well as its ability to interconnect
internationally and to deal with the risk of a terrorist attack
involving nuclear or radioactive materials. The GICNT, a joint
US-Russian initiative, has now evolved into an informal network of
over 70 countries. It pursues it objective of boosting the
protection, detection, prosecution and response capabilities of a
state by fostering cooperation on three levels: between a government
and its agencies; between government and the private sector; and
between like-minded states. Given its comprehensive approach to the
nuclear terrorism threat, the initiative has great potential.
Nevertheless, structural flaws such as the absence of any evaluation
mechanism and the exclusion of military-related nuclear materials
and sites are likely to make its impact far less global than
expected.
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Nuclear Energy Developments in the Mediterranean and the Gulf
Giacomo Luciani
Several Arab countries have recently manifested an interest in
civilian nuclear energy. For some, like Egypt, this is the revival
of an old interest, for others, notably the members of the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC), it represents a clear reversal of
previously held positions. This interest has been interpreted as an
implicit threat to move in the direction of acquiring a military
nuclear capability, in case Iran develops a bomb. Instead, the
article argues that interest in nuclear energy has strong economic
motivations for all Arab countries, although the position of the GCC
is quite different from that of North Africa and Levant countries,
from the point of view of both the cogency of motivation and the
ability to concretely and rapidly launch a civilian nuclear program.
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Civil society in international politics
Civil Society and Peacebuilding: Mapping Functions in Working for Peace
Catherine Barnes
Civil society play roles at every point in the development of
conflict and its resolution: from surfacing situations of injustice
to preventing violence, from creating conditions conducive to peace
talks to mediating a settlement and then promoting it, from setting
a policy agenda to healing war-scarred psyches. After situating
civil society peacebuilding roles in the policy context and
highlighting several critiques, this article concentrates on
charting the specific functions civil society can play, focusing on
initiatives by actors from a conflict zone and their external
supporters. It concludes identifying several recommendations and
areas in need of further research.
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The Romanticisation of the Local: Welfare, Culture and Peacebuilding
Oliver P. Richmond
The key feature of the dominant liberal approach to peacebuilding is
the neoliberal marketisation of peace, rather than engagement with
civil society and the agents and subjects of this peace. This is a
particularly Western, liberal, and Enlightenment-derived discourse
of peace, which is far from culturally and socially appropriate or
sensitive, and has little chance of establishing a locally
self-sustaining peace. This represents a "romanticisation of
the local", of civil society, and of the liberal culture of
peacebuilding. Its cultural engagement, including its support for
civil society development, is therefore little more than
instrumental and is used to defer responsibility for the welfare of
the local.
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Environmental and Ecological Citizenship in Civil Society
David Humphreys
Drawing from the work of Andrew Dobson, two notions of citizenship
in civil society can be distinguished: environmental citizenship,
which focuses on environmental rights and seeks to redefine the
relationship between the state and the citizen; and ecological
citizenship, which goes beyond a rights-based notion of citizenship
to advocate the fair usage of ecological space across international
borders. Using civil society initiatives to conserve forests, this
article argues that these two notions of citizenship should be seen
as overlapping in that civil society groups seek to work through
national and international law to reduce the ecological footprint of
some countries on others. The article concludes by drawing a
distinction between the environmental state and the ecological
state.
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Italy in World Affairs
New Actors on the Horizon: the International Outreach of Italian CSOs
Donatella Cugliandro
Italian civil
society organisations are holding more and more sway in the foreign
policy arena, strengthening links with their counterparts both in
the European Union and further abroad. Some well-organised groups
are increasingly capable of wielding influence in the international
scenario, mainly thanks to their initiatives directed at fuelling
citizens' interests in sensitive issues and fostering transnational
cooperation. In parallel with these global trends, Italian civil
society is going through a period of change and reassessment, shaken
by the need to protect some core values to which it is undeniably
attached.
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Book Reviews
What Will America be Like in the New post-American World?
Alberto Biginelli
Review of: The
post-American world, Fareed Zakaria, W.W. Norton, 2008
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Exploring the Theory and Practice of the Security Dilemma
Andrew Liaropoulos
Review of: The
security dilemma : fear, cooperation and trust in world politics, Ken
Booth and Nicholas J. Wheeler, Palgrave Macmillan, 2008r
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