Description
EU foreign policy experiences unprecedented turbulences that put key achievements of the European integration project at risk. Externally, the EU’s global environment is characterized by the reconfiguration of power, growing divisions, and the contestation of established liberal order. Simultaneously, the EU’s neighbourhood is increasingly conflict prone and instable, triggering migration flows and the proliferation of illiberal values. ‘Domestically’, the EU faces severe internal conflicts, marked by austerity, Brexit, growing nationalism, populism and new protectionism.
The Action ENTER aims to improve our understanding of central properties of EU foreign policy in light of these new realities, focusing on perceptions, communication, contestation. In today’s world, the success of EU foreign policy depends on the EU’s ability to instantaneously respond to stimuli and pressures originating from both the international and the intra-EU levels. Linking internal and external policy dynamics, the Action has a strong potential for breakthrough scientific developments. A central objective of the action is to derive theoretically informed, policy relevant advice for the EU’s strategic approach to its international relations, its communication, and for dealing with the interaction between internal and external challenges. It will generate a step change in how the new realities of EU foreign policy are theorized and addressed. This will be achieved by establishing multi-national, multidisciplinary collaborations at the nexus of policy fields and research communities that have not sufficiently communicated in the past. Substantive efforts to bridge between the “academic-practitioner divide” are made, to synthesize knowledge, facilitate shared understandings, and inform EU foreign policy.
Action keywords
European Union - Foreign Policy - Perceptions - International Relations - International Order
Management Committee
Country | MC Member |
---|---|
Albania | |
Albania | |
Austria | |
Austria | |
Belgium | |
Belgium | |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | |
Bulgaria | |
Bulgaria | |
Croatia | |
Croatia | |
Cyprus | |
Cyprus | |
Czech Republic | |
Denmark | |
Estonia | |
Estonia | |
Finland | |
Finland | |
France | |
France | |
Germany | |
Germany | |
Greece | |
Greece | |
Hungary | |
Hungary | |
Iceland | |
Iceland | |
Ireland | |
Ireland | |
Israel | |
Israel | |
Italy | |
Italy | |
Latvia | |
Latvia | |
Lithuania | |
Lithuania | |
Malta | |
Moldova | |
Moldova | |
Montenegro | |
Netherlands | |
Netherlands | |
North Macedonia | |
North Macedonia | |
Norway | |
Norway | |
Poland | |
Poland | |
Portugal | |
Portugal | |
Romania | |
Romania | |
Serbia | |
Slovakia | |
Slovenia | |
Slovenia | |
Spain | |
Spain | |
Sweden | |
Switzerland | |
Switzerland | |
Türkiye | |
Türkiye | |
United Kingdom | |
United Kingdom |
Main Contacts
Action Contacts
COST Staff
Leadership
Role | Leader |
---|---|
Action Chair | |
Action Vice-Chair | |
Grant Holder Scientific Representative | |
Science Communication Coordinator | |
Grant Awarding Coordinator | |
WG1 Leader | |
WG2 Leader | |
WG3 Leader | |
WG4 Leader |
Additional roles
Role | Leader |
---|---|
ITC CG Coordinator | |
STSM Coordinator |
Working Groups
Number | Title | Leader |
---|---|---|
1 | New Realities | |
2 | Perception and Communication | |
3 | Contestation | |
4 | Relations |
Membership
Name | Working Group | Country |
---|---|---|
WG 1 | Türkiye | |
WG 1, WG 4 | ||
WG 1, WG 4 | China | |
WG 1, WG 3 | ||
WG 1, WG 2 | Albania | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 4 | Sweden | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Portugal | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 4 | Türkiye | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Moldova | |
WG 1, WG 3 | Finland | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 4 | Ireland | |
WG 1, WG 3 | Lithuania | |
WG 1 | Türkiye | |
WG 1 | Denmark | |
WG 1 | Belgium | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 4 | ||
WG 1, WG 2 | Croatia | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Romania | |
WG 1, WG 3 | Serbia | |
WG 1, WG 4 | Bulgaria | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 4 | Türkiye | |
WG 1 | ||
WG 1, WG 2, WG 4 | Türkiye | |
WG 1 | Iceland | |
WG 1 | Austria | |
WG 1, WG 4 | United Kingdom | |
WG 1 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 4 | Albania | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4 | Türkiye | |
WG 2, WG 4 | Germany | |
WG 2 | Germany | |
WG 2, WG 4 | Israel | |
WG 2, WG 4 | Moldova | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Iceland | |
WG 2 | ||
WG 2 | Slovenia | |
WG 2 | Latvia | |
WG 2 | Cyprus | |
WG 2, WG 4 | Romania | |
WG 3, WG 4 | ||
WG 3, WG 4 | ||
WG 3 | Croatia | |
WG 3 | Belgium | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Bulgaria | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Norway | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Slovenia | |
WG 3 | Spain | |
WG 3, WG 4 | ||
WG 3 | ||
WG 3 | Bosnia & Herzegovina | |
WG 3 | Norway | |
WG 3 | ||
WG 4 | ||
WG 4 | Italy | |
WG 4 | Austria | |
WG 4 | United Kingdom | |
WG 4 | France | |
WG 4 | Lithuania | |
WG 4 | Montenegro | |
WG 4 | Türkiye | |
WG 4 | Portugal |