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42 - The EU and South–South cooperation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 December 2023

Erik Jones
Affiliation:
European University Institute, Florence and The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland
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Summary

The EU can best learn about its own flaws and potentials and become a meaningful utopia for its own citizens by “bringing the outside world back in”. (Nicolaidis & Howse 2002: 769)

When she spoke as candidate for the presidency of the European Commission before the assembled members of the European Parliament on 16 July 2019, Ursula von der Leyen articulated Europe's global challenges as follows:

None of these challenges will go away. But there have been different ways to react to these trends. Some are turning towards authoritarian regimes, some are buying their global influence and creating dependencies by investing in ports and roads. And others are turning towards protectionism. None of these options are for us. We want multilateralism, we want fair trade, we defend the rules-based order … We have to do it the European way.

In her speech, von der Leyen delivered a clear vision of a sui generis collective European position. But reality often tells another story. Consider European development policy in Africa. For decades, the EU has undertaken several important steps in realizing its goals of European integration. During the 2000s, the EU passed the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness and began forging a new consensus on development. Now the EU is working to shape international development cooperation in accordance with its agenda to promote human rights, good governance, and democracy. One challenge for the European Commission has been to “produce a statement on EU development policy, a sort of Brussels consensus to counter the Washington consensus” (Carbone 2007: 54–5). With the establishment of European External Action Service in 2010, moreover, the EU is emerging as a major actor in the field of global development.

Nevertheless, there are a number of obstacles to the creation of a common European position on development. Internally, the EU has not overcome the conflicts of interests and competing policies among the member states. Externally, the EU is still facing challenges dealing with stakeholders at the local level in African countries where European interests and colonial legacies often become entangled. Increasingly, moreover, Europe is not the only player.

Type
Chapter
Information
European Studies
Past, Present and Future
, pp. 189 - 192
Publisher: Agenda Publishing
Print publication year: 2020

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