This paper discusses uses and misuses of EU border management models and strategies in the framework of crisis response interventions in the Southern and Eastern neighbourhoods. It focuses especially on Libya and Ukraine, cases which dramatically stand out as the conflicts at the gates of Europe. The deployment of border management instruments appears to follow different trajectories in the two countries, diverging in terms of both design and implementation. By relying on collaborative research materials resulting from extensive fieldwork, the paper argues that the differentiation of EU’s interventions across the ENP countries can be explained as the result of growing political and institutional fragmentation in the EU, the replacement of the “transformative power”-mantra with new stabilization templates and weak strategic consistency among member states, each conveying different security identities and interests vis-à-vis EU’s external actions and sectors. Primary data, collected between 2016 and 2018, does not point to an increase in conflict-sensitivity, context-specificity and local ownership, they rather reveal the crisis of the EU´s liberal project.

Whose Enemy at the Gates? Border Management in the Context of EU Crisis Response in Libya and Ukraine / Loschi, Chiara; Russo, Alessandra. - In: GEOPOLITICS. - ISSN 1465-0045. - 2021, 26:5(2021), pp. 1486-1509. [10.1080/14650045.2020.1716739]

Whose Enemy at the Gates? Border Management in the Context of EU Crisis Response in Libya and Ukraine

Russo, Alessandra
Ultimo
2021-01-01

Abstract

This paper discusses uses and misuses of EU border management models and strategies in the framework of crisis response interventions in the Southern and Eastern neighbourhoods. It focuses especially on Libya and Ukraine, cases which dramatically stand out as the conflicts at the gates of Europe. The deployment of border management instruments appears to follow different trajectories in the two countries, diverging in terms of both design and implementation. By relying on collaborative research materials resulting from extensive fieldwork, the paper argues that the differentiation of EU’s interventions across the ENP countries can be explained as the result of growing political and institutional fragmentation in the EU, the replacement of the “transformative power”-mantra with new stabilization templates and weak strategic consistency among member states, each conveying different security identities and interests vis-à-vis EU’s external actions and sectors. Primary data, collected between 2016 and 2018, does not point to an increase in conflict-sensitivity, context-specificity and local ownership, they rather reveal the crisis of the EU´s liberal project.
2021
5
Loschi, Chiara; Russo, Alessandra
Whose Enemy at the Gates? Border Management in the Context of EU Crisis Response in Libya and Ukraine / Loschi, Chiara; Russo, Alessandra. - In: GEOPOLITICS. - ISSN 1465-0045. - 2021, 26:5(2021), pp. 1486-1509. [10.1080/14650045.2020.1716739]
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Whose Enemy at the Gates Border Management in the Context of EU Crisis Response in Libya and Ukraine.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (Publisher’s layout)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 2.14 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
2.14 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/251625
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 12
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 11
  • OpenAlex ND
social impact