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Zivilmacht Europa: a critical geopolitics of the European Union as a global power

Identifieur interne : 001751 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 001750; suivant : 001752

Zivilmacht Europa: a critical geopolitics of the European Union as a global power

Auteurs : Veit Bachmann ; James D. Sidaway

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:D2B4F1CDDB9613329B340A6AA5FA28A4C5D0A848

English descriptors

Abstract

The EU's global role is the focus of much media, political and scholarly commentary. This paper explores how ideas associated with the term ‘civilian power’ became an enduring geopolitical conception for an integrated Europe as a significant global actor. It traces their evolution from the early 1970s, whereby in 1972 François Duchêne (Anglo‐Swiss scholar, journalist and advisor to Jean Monnet) introduced a vision of the European Community as a civilian power, just before the first enlargement of the Community and at a moment of geopolitical and geoeconomic turbulence associated with a sense of faltering American hegemony. Narratives about civilian power have subsequently been reworked and revitalised in the context of further European Union enlargement and challenges from American neo‐conservatism. In these contexts, this paper critically scrutinises the range of meanings associated with civilian power and their relations to other claims and visions of what it means to be a great power.

Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-5661.2008.00325.x

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:D2B4F1CDDB9613329B340A6AA5FA28A4C5D0A848

Le document en format XML

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<abstract lang="en">The EU's global role is the focus of much media, political and scholarly commentary. This paper explores how ideas associated with the term ‘civilian power’ became an enduring geopolitical conception for an integrated Europe as a significant global actor. It traces their evolution from the early 1970s, whereby in 1972 François Duchêne (Anglo‐Swiss scholar, journalist and advisor to Jean Monnet) introduced a vision of the European Community as a civilian power, just before the first enlargement of the Community and at a moment of geopolitical and geoeconomic turbulence associated with a sense of faltering American hegemony. Narratives about civilian power have subsequently been reworked and revitalised in the context of further European Union enlargement and challenges from American neo‐conservatism. In these contexts, this paper critically scrutinises the range of meanings associated with civilian power and their relations to other claims and visions of what it means to be a great power.</abstract>
<note type="content">*Civilian power Europe.</note>
<subject lang="en">
<genre>keywords</genre>
<topic>European Union</topic>
<topic>civilian power</topic>
<topic>critical geopolitics</topic>
<topic>François Duchêne</topic>
<topic>Imperialism</topic>
<topic>power</topic>
</subject>
<relatedItem type="host">
<titleInfo>
<title>Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers</title>
</titleInfo>
<genre type="journal">journal</genre>
<identifier type="ISSN">0020-2754</identifier>
<identifier type="eISSN">1475-5661</identifier>
<identifier type="DOI">10.1111/(ISSN)1475-5661</identifier>
<identifier type="PublisherID">TRAN</identifier>
<part>
<date>2009</date>
<detail type="volume">
<caption>vol.</caption>
<number>34</number>
</detail>
<detail type="issue">
<caption>no.</caption>
<number>1</number>
</detail>
<extent unit="pages">
<start>94</start>
<end>109</end>
<total>16</total>
</extent>
</part>
</relatedItem>
<identifier type="istex">D2B4F1CDDB9613329B340A6AA5FA28A4C5D0A848</identifier>
<identifier type="DOI">10.1111/j.1475-5661.2008.00325.x</identifier>
<identifier type="ArticleID">TRAN325</identifier>
<accessCondition type="use and reproduction" contentType="copyright">© 2008 The Authors. Journal compilation © Royal Geographical Society (with The Institute of British Geographers) 2008</accessCondition>
<recordInfo>
<recordContentSource>WILEY</recordContentSource>
<recordOrigin>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</recordOrigin>
</recordInfo>
</mods>
</metadata>
<serie></serie>
</istex>
</record>

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